Because the bias tracking is crude at best.

For cathode biased amps the VVR works extremely well.
Agreed, it's a fine entry level solution - just use a decent RV4 pot and add a 22n 600V cap across it.
Kevin O'Connor's version may be superior,but so is the price tag.
KOC's cathode bias basic DC scaling kit, the SB-2, is priced at CAD50 (USD50 at today's exchange rate). It comes in kit form, includes *two* complete DC Power Scaling boards (two Vin, two Vout tracking or not, for instance one board for plates, the other for screens, or roll your own), and all components including a PEC RV4 Mil-spec 2 W 1ML pot rated at 900 V RMS continuous dielectric strength and 500 V continuous operating voltage, as well as a dual-ganged Alpha (Taiwan) 16mm compact pot for "drive compensation", KOC's parlance for master volume.
http://www.londonpower.com/catalog/product_info.php?cPath=7&products_id=28Dana's VVR kit is priced at USD30. It's preassembled, includes one board - one Vin, one Vout only - and all components, with a basic Alpha (Taiwan) RV24 0.5 W 1ML pot rated at 500 V dielectric strength for 1 minute.
So which one is less expensive?
If he gave proper instructions and wasn't so reclusive and hard to talk to he'd sell lots of the kits.
The instructions supplied with his kits are short, but perfectly adequate for techies who know what a mosfet is and how to use it.
KOC is always available for customers by email or thru the Power Scaling web site (
http://www.powerscaling.com/community/index.php). He answers questions real fast and offers excellent customer support if you don't behave like a spoiled brat or a know-it-all Bozo.