That's on original designs yes.But when you alter lead dress and use higher voltages all bets are off.It couldn't hurt to try a larger grid stopper and see what it does.
Case in point: Fender 5F6A amps have no grid stoppers at all on the original amp schematics but nearly all new builds need them.They oscillate otherwise.I have had to go as high as 50k on some 5F6A builds with no change in layout from one to the next.
The oscillation came in the form of a distortion through the speaker.
But in my experience most unstable amps are lead-dress related.Your amps look neat,but some wires may cross in odd ways that can set up an oscillation.
PI wiring is the most prone to this in my opinion.i had a princeton reverb once that howled at certain volumes levels and a move of a couple of PI wires completly eliminated it with no other changes.
I find i have the most problems when I deviate from known working layouts to fit the amp into odd chassis.Grid wire length is a reall issue.Sometimes a grid wire that is too long will set the amp up for an oscillation.Simply shortening all the grid wires can make a huge difference.I mean ALL the tube grids,not just the power tubes.
Contrary to popular belief,I have had less issues with amps crammed into small chassis vs amps put into oversize chassis.
Long wire runs seem to cause me grief.