Let's take a step back and think a bit.SixStringBender wrote:I don't understand how the cathode follower is set up so it is at the normal negative bias of the output tube. Unless this is done by choosing a cathode bias resistor that will do so by resisting the -100V supply??? Again, in the case of the MOSFET, a source resistor instead of a cathode resistor from source to the -100V supply.
Everything needs certain inputs of the right kind and amount to function correctly. For instance, a gasoline-engine car needs a supply of proper-octane gasoline. If you feed it diesel oil, it doesn't work no matter how much diesel fuel it gets. Likewise for diesel engine trucks and such. Gasoline is not a good fuel for them.
A power pentode or power beam tube grid needs to be fed a voltage somewhere between the voltage at the cathode and tens of volts more negative. In typical fixed bias amps, the cathode is very near 0V, so the grid needs fed between 0V and tens of volts negative. At some point, a tube like the EL34 or 6L6 will go into cutoff when its grid voltage is way negative, perhaps -60V for an EL34 and -50V for a 6L6.
The useable range of grid voltages is then 0V to maybe -60. In a normal amp, they are held there in no-signal conditions by a resistor to bias supply, which is set just a little more positive than the cutoff voltage.
If we want to drive that grid with the source of a MOSFET, we have to arrange the MOSFET so its source covers that range of voltage that the grid needs. And the MOSFET itself needs fed what inputs IT needs to work right.
So the MOSFET source has to be able to go to maybe -60V compared to ground. The only good way to do this is to make a negative supply bigger than that, maybe -80 to -100V, and put a resistor between the source of the MOSFET and that new power supply. The drain of the MOSFET also needs to be supplied with a voltage higher than the source under all conditions. So the drain needs a voltage significantly more positive than 0V.
When these are set up correctly, the source of the MOSFET will *follow* the gate voltage on the MOSFET, but a few volts lower because of the threshold voltage the MOSFET needs to operate. So to make the grid of the power tube which is being fed by the MOSFET source be at -37V, the MOSFET gate will be biased to maybe -33V, the source will be maybe 4V (a guess at a threshold voltage for the MOSFET) lower than that, and the tube grid will be happy.
There has to be a power supply more negative than the MOSFET will need to pull the grid because the MOSFET doesn't pull the grid negative, it lets the source resistor pull the grid down. When the grid needs to go higher than the bias voltage, the MOSFET conducts more current and pulls the grid up.
Is this making sense?