Originally posted by http://www.aikenamps.com/WhatIsBiasing.htm
What I notice here is that the positive rail goes to the anode, and the negative to the cathode. This has to happen, because electrons flow from the cathode to the anode; a pentode still acts like a diode, reversing polarity simply will not work.
Now, my negative power source is common to ground. Where the hell do I get a negative voltage with respect to the cathode, without dropping a resistor under the cathode? It looks like if I want to do this, I need to apply a positive voltage to the cathode... i.e., drop a small positive rail right on the cathode, using a zener to limit voltage and a resistor to limit current so I'm only shorting a couple microamps to ground/common (wtf?). Then I can fixed-bias the amp by referencing the grid to ground with a trim pot at (I guess) R5.
... what the hell? This looks like complicated brain damage. Cathode bias seems much simpler.
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