I remember that "cutting ac feedback" from an escobedo schem. I still don't quite get it. The feedback resistor is divided by the miller effect so it appears smaller, does splitting it in two with a cap to ground make matters better, or worse?
Voltage divider bias is less variable because instead of having the base voltage determined just by base current and collector voltage (and the negative feedback between the two with beta), you have a somewhat stable base voltage to work with (still influenced by base current depending on the divider values).
I'm interested to know more about this building block, I've seen the vulcan before but haven't heard it. The diode is obviously throwing half of the wave in the trash, then that gets inverted and decoupled and the process is repeated. I guess there's no crossover distortion because there's only one diode, so no "coring out", just clipping and losing everything above -0,6V?
Anyway great thread everyone. Sorry for not quoting properly the messages I'm answering to.