This is a case of accidentally comparing apples and oranges.
Phono cartridges and preamps are specified at 5cm/sec groove velocity at 1000Hz. This is typical of "0 vu" signals - the maximum signal voltage averaged over a few hundred milliseconds. Peak instantaneous signal voltages are about 5 times greater (14dB) for typical well-recorded vinyl recordings. This 14dB difference is usually called "headroom." Digital systems and power amplifiers are usually specified at clipping, i.e. peak instantaneous signal voltage.
So your 1.2v nominal output from Eros is actually 6v peak.
Like everything, the reality is still more complicated. Low-power SETs which typically have no feedback can be run into moderate clipping without it being objectionable, which is not true of amps with large amounts of negative feedback. My rough rule of thumb is you can go about 6dB (twice the voltage) before the clipping becomes a problem. 0.8v nominal into your amp will produce up to 6dB of clipping on peaks, while Eros produces 1.2v nominal (and 6v peak.
Having said that, it is worth noting that there is a wide variation among records, so all the above numbers are necessarily approximate.