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I used to experiment with such mosfet amps and found designs like this doesn't make any advantage over typical bipolar amps; like TDA20...You'll need to justify that claim about the advantages of the TDA*
There are a few advantages in using a single mosfet driving a speaker. Just to name a few:
- Aesthetic simplicity, just one active device
- no NFB
- no severe rail sticking when overdriven
- overdrives nicely
- high output impedance
- natural short-circuit protection (all current is already flowing

)
- low parts count
Disadvantages:
- lots of heat
- needs a very regulated power supply
- (...)
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The key to get the tube-like sound out of a mosfet is high output impedance and that means an "Output Transformer", and that's the problem; if you're going to use an OT why not build an actual tube amp?!ah, "tube-like-sound". I think one should get rid of such an obsession when playing with ss devices. There are a few ways to get high output impedance in audio amplifiers, common source and class A configurations is just one of them.
Similar amps with a OT works nicely but the bias gets a little tricky, also with a inductor. Mosfets can drive speakers directly without transformers and the quadratic dependence of drain current as a function of the input voltage gives a pleasant harmonic distortion.
If the obsession goes to far just repeat the math of the Fetzer-valve-triode-emulator for mosfets...
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If you are really interested in this subject, search for "KMG's mosfet amps" and you'll find some interesting designs using mosfets with OTs.I've seen those, they are class AB. Don't like how they sound but that's irrelevant, matter of opinion.
Cheers.