Motorola EB boards were NEVER intended to be production boards. As built and sold from the Motorola engineering kits, they have extraordinarily high peak drain voltages on some bands. This is NOT, or was not in my careful tests, a parasitic. It was a simple harmonic resonance in the foil traces from the FET's to the transformer. The transistor drains are loaded with a very high impedance and so any harmonic energy that falls on those resonances with add a short peak that rides on top of the normal positive drain voltage swing and exceeds the drain to gate breakdown voltage in some FET's.
This is why some amplifiers will seem to be fine, while others occasionally fail. At least this was my experiences when making actual load pull tests.
Of course I can't say something someone else builds will never oscillate, but I never ran into that.
I don't know why people assume those are optimized production boards. They are not. All of the EB series are really just things that were originally intended to give a starting point for engineers.
note:
I never used the Motorola boards without input swamping.
Ameritron does not use something similar to that board configuration (I never used the exact Motorola board in Heathkit or Ameritron or medical applications for several reasons all associated with reliability, and now I moved they entirely away for the concept in that board) or the transformers, because the boards and transformers were nowhere near optimum.
73 Tom W8JI