I personally believe the new board will treat the EML gently enough in a Paramount, and the EML should be no problem in a Stereomour or other cap-coupled amp. However, I don't guarantee anything - I am not going to invest that much $$$ in an attempt to see if my designs can destroy the tube, nor am I going to run a 10,000 hour test switching the amp on and off every hour to determine if the tubes will survive long enough to be satisfactory.
Please understand, everyone, that the new board has some limitations. If you shut it off and turn it back on without waiting 30 minutes, the soft start won't work as well as it does from a cold start, and the EML could be damaged. The main purpose of the new board is to accommodate heat sinks more easily, and to allow an adjustable bias on the driver to set the driver plate voltage. The soft start was easy to implement, and it cures a grid-cathode spark that occurs with a few other new-design tubes, so we included it. These things, along with a small reduction in the regulated voltage, should increase the reliability of the board under severe conditions, especially excess power line voltage - which is becoming more and more common.
Also, I should mention that the 2.5v 300Bs run as 2A3s will run much more conservatively than regular 2A3s and should last much longer, even though they don't produce any more power. To my mind, that's their main advantage in a 2A3 amp. To get more power from them, you have to run them as 300Bs in a 300B amp which happens to have an available 2.5v/2.5A filament power supply. (Such as the Paramount, of course!)