I too like the EI power tubes and preamp tubes for my AC30. There is no need to match preamp tubes. In the Ac30, the power tubes all share a common cathode bias resistor, and all the tubes set their own bias level in relation to that, and in relation to each other. Because of this, it is a good idea to use matched power tubes in a Vox AC30 so that you don't have one tube trying to swing more than the others. It will reduce hum and crossover distortion, and make the amp sound richer overall if you use matched power tubes. The AC15 is the same idea, but only two tubes share the common bias resistor, so you only get two matched power tubes.
There is a bad misconception out there about the AC30 in that it is class A. It is completely NOT TRUE! I'll refer you to Randall Aiken's excellent article about it, (link below) but the big reason it is not Class A is because the voltages are too high. If you tried to make it Class A at the voltages the power tubes run at, they would burn up. It is Class A at very low volumes like most amps, but as the amp is turned up, it goes clearly into Class AB. Many people think that an amp that is cathode biased is Class A, but the bias method and the Class the amp is biased into are completely different things. The AC30 is a hot biased, push-pull Class AB amp. Further, the bulk of guitar amps ever made are not Class A. The only ones that are for sure are single ended things like the Fender Champ, the THD Univalve, the Epiphone Valve Junior, etc. Read the article.
http://www.aikenamps.com/VoxAC30classA_2.html