just out of interest, how does a DC elevated filament supply help reduce (protect against) arcing in a cathode follower?
I thought the arcing was caused by the cathode being at ground potential for a split second when the CF grid get the blast of HT, and the arc is from grid to cathode. I thought the protection against it is to add a resistor and diode in series between the grid and the cathode of the follower. I didn't know different filament supplies made a difference.
you're reducing the heater-cathode voltage (180v design max) to within its safe limits - most amps with a cathode follower are pushing the design spec limits here, but the majority of ECC83s/12AX7s cope with it.
I use DC elevated heaters on everything now, its simple, gets rid of any hum and makes the amp more reliable - whats not to like.