The grid stopper is to stop high frequency oscillations (think RF). It has no effect on microphonics.
I have had only a few microphonic tubes all others have been fine. Microphonics are the fault of the tube itself, not circuit design.
Reading the post the only question is how you wired the heaters. The FP 1 was a 12.6V heater winding the FP 2 was 6.3V. Plus there is a heater biasing circuit that keeps the heater to cathode voltage reasonable. I'm guessing the rest was the same. I haven't seen a FP 1 schematic.
Thanks Grainger. I understand the function of a grid-stopper, I was just moaning that my only noise-free tubes are microphonic.
The mains transformer on my amp is from Black Art Audio (Australian) as Bottlehead didn't supply a transformer for European voltages at the time. Heaters are 12.6V and I have the heater biasing circuit which measured correctly at the time of build.
Grid stoppers are never a problem, and always good practice. They are usually more important with tubes that have higher transconductance - the 12AU7 is nominally 2200 micromhos, vs. 5500 for a 2A3 or a 12AT7. Though very similar, the Foreplay III is the first one that I designed, and I always use stoppers.
For noise and microphonic problems, you may want to adjust teh gain budget of your system. See the notes on signal and noise levels on the Community page, if you have not already.
Thanks Paul. I have way more gain than I need so I'll look into reducing that.