This is not an answer as one would like to write one; but there is still only one other answer around so far - thus a second attempt might be helpful anyway even if not yet complete.
I've come across a claim, that Ramanujan has proved, that the function
$$ f(x) = 1 + {e^x \over 2^3} + {e^{e^x} \over 2^{3^4}} + {e^{e^{e^x}} \over 2^{3^{4^5}}} + ... $$
is entire. This implies, that the sequence of terms approach zero for each x, and thus that the denominators outgrow the numerators. By this we see, that the iterated logarithms applied to the numerators, when iterated h times until they arrive at x, and then applied with the same number of iterations to the denominators must arrive at some value arbitrarily greater than x for each k'th term after $ k \gt K$ for some fixed $K $.
Thus we have the first information, that $$ \ln^{[h]} \left(2^{3^{4^{\ldots ^h}}} \right)$$ where $ \ln^{[h]} $ means the h'fold iteration of the $\ln $ , diverges with increasing h .
The second information is the trivial one, that if the entries in the iterated exponential are all equal, and specifically equal the base of natural logarithms $e$ ,
$$ \ln^{[h]} \left(e^{e^{e^{\ldots ^e}}} \right)$$
then the iterated logarithm of the iterated exponential always arrives at the same constant value for increasing h.
The third information is then, that the iterated exponential in the initial question has decreasing terms,
$$ \ln^{[h]} \left(h^{\ldots ^{4^{3^2}}} \right)$$
so possibly using the argumentation of Ramanujan one can also prove, that the expression asked for, actually converges to a fixed value. Unfortunately I don't have access to that argumentation of Ramanujan, but here is a link in the tetration-forum to (possibly) more helpful information how to retrieve that source.