You can do permanent damage to a tube amp's output transformers by running the amp without a speaker load connected - and besides, your ARC should be able to come up to it's best sound in fairly short order anyway (usually around 15-30 minutes for most tube amps, assuming it's already been initially broken-in and hasn't been sitting unused for a very long time). If you want to do A/B comparisions shorter than that kind of interval - say, five minutes for a track with one amp, then switch to the other and listen over again - just turn off the amp you've finished listening to, disconnect it, connect the other one, and turn it on (giving it 30-60 seconds before listening). This will work because the amp not currently in use will effectively stay mostly 'warm' for several minutes after switching it off and disconnecting it, so if you start with both amps from 'cold' and keep changing amps this way over the course of your comparitive auditioning session, you'll maintain a pretty level playing field throughout, and should reach near-peak (but never absolute peak) warm-up for both amps within the first 30-60 minutes. But for more extended listening with any one amp before switching (or if you just don't like having to jump up and move cables around every few minutes), you'd have to find a way to keep the unused amp safely 'on the boil' while you listen if you don't want to skew the results or face lengthier warm-up delays when swapping out.