Series feed...that was my initial thought. In fact, I had it wired that way for a bit and there probably was more power. In the end, however, I wanted to keep your fine current source board in the circuit to compensate for voltage sag as the batteries age.
Alan
The cathode resistor provides an equivalent voltage-sag compensation for series feed - my apologies for not making that more clear. Covering ALL the ramifications is pretty hard! The current source eliminates any effects of the plate choke in parafeed, leaving only the output transformer effects - but series feed should be the same as long as the transformer is gapped for plenty of current. And 80mA is a pretty good margin relative to 2mA! :^)
The virtues of parallel feed are mainly two: power supply isolation, and the possibility of interleaved output transformers. With batteries, there is no power supply noise (*but see below) and as you already have an airgapped transformer you might as well give it a fair shot.
The problem with current source loads is that they consume some of the power supply voltage - around 1/3 of it, which translates to half the output power potential if you are operating under restricted voltage conditions, as with Quickie. Great for a low distortion preamp, but limiting for headphone application unless you have plenty of power available (like the Smack).
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* Some observers have claimed that batteries create noise as they discharge, and that they have an AC impedance that is not close enough to zero to be inaudible. You can parallel the battery with a good capacitor to test this - if the capacitor impedance is less than the battery, the signal current will go through the capacitor instead of the battery. I would put the capacitor after the power switch so that leakage current does not slowly drain the battery, but it won't make much difference unless you have long idle periods. If anyone tries this, please report your results! (The capacitor should be larger than the output or parafeed capacitor in order to help make it an unequivocal test, but even a smaller cap should have an effect in the high frequencies. If you have a few snazzy caps in your junk box, it's a free experiment!)