The 300b is one of the more challenging DHT's to implement as an output tube. The design, driver tube(s), and power supplies matter quite a bit. Knowing which amps the OP is using would help in providing a better response, as there is a great variation in possibilities available.
To parse this further, there is a difference between volume and drive. Usually a 300b SET will have enough voltage gain to play loudly, but it will lack the ability to dump enough current into hungry woofers quickly, so bass response can be ill-defined and/or lack appropriate energy for the program material. Bass driver design, compliance, magnet strength, and system Q (damping, or the ratio of stored energy vs. released energy) matter significantly.
The marriage of amp and speaker in this scenario is quite finicky and matching parameters is all important. I'm not privy to Daedalus design, but I have owned a couple pair over the last 7 years. I don't think the bass driver/cabinet design is optimal for SET amplification when playing hard rock. Driver/cabinet Q is too high, the suspension too compliant. Bass speaker systems with low Q, very high magnetic flux, large radiating surface, and stiff compliance are a better match for lower powered SET amplification, which are low current and low damping factor - a marriage of stiff and loose to achieve average, lol.
However, in practice it's not bad to listen to IMO. Daedalus has implemented a nice design for broad application, but it's not optimal for most 300b SET for driving music. Jazz, vocals, and similar can be lovely. If you want to bang, I'd say 20 watts of quality push-pull minimum. More will be merrier.