The Stereomour is designed around the 2A3, and the Paramount around the 300B. The variations are adaptations for those who really want them, but they are not the original design target.
We don't make a specifically 45-powered amp because there are no affordable modern production 45 tubes, but we have many customers who believe the 45 does, or can, sound better than the 2A3 - in spite of producing about half as much power. Owing to some design apects of the Stereomour, dating from its earliest incarnation as the Paramour, it is easily adapted to run a 45 at a good operating point. In Paramour II and now in Stereomour, we have provided specific adaptation instructions so they could be built either way. But you still have to come up with the 45s yourself!
The Paramount has a similar legacy from earlier products. "Afterglow" was the second power amp (released in 1997 when the business was still called Electronic Tonalities, before Bottlehead was adopted). It was a high-end design by John Tucker and had direct coupling between driver and power tube. Variants on that design have been in the product line for many of the succeeding 17 hears. Because the power supply voltage and the output transformer impedance of the 300B Paramount were suitable for this topology, we provided that option. It's too esoteric a design to support a fully separate product, but the Paramount adaptation keeps it available for those who really want it. I don't, incidentally, recommend it unless you are pretty knowledgeable because direct coupling is less reliable and more high-maintenance that capacitive coupling. It is a higher-performing 2A3, with direct coupling, DC filament power, and shunt-regulated driver power distinguishing it from the Stereomour. It also has higher internal voltages, requires regular maintenance of the operating point, and has the potential to damage output tubes if you don't use the latest version and follow the turn-on/turn-off protocol carefully.
Our customer base has evolved beyond the initial hard-core experimenters, as the availability and popularity of SET amplifiers has expanded over the last 20 years. So these levels of flexibility are becoming less important.
Hope that helps clarify things!