But you have to keep the cathode current under the specified maximum limit?
/Leevi
But as more current flows through rk, the voltage drop across rk increases (E = I x R), which amounts to an increase the bias (-ve grid-to-cathode) voltage. So your increase in tube current doesn't result in an increase in plate dissipation in the same way as it would if you had the same amount of tube current increase in a fixed-bias stage.
i.e.: e.g. I have measured changes on a cathode-biased SE 6V6 with the screen sitting at ~60V below the plate and with a 470R cathode resistor. At 340 on the plate the cathode voltage is around 17.7 (37.6mA tube current, minus about 3mA for the screen = 34.6mA plate current, x 322Va-k = 11.1W). When I increase the B+ so that the plate is then at 406, the cathode voltage is now around 19.8V, which is 42.1mA tube current minus in this case 5.3mA (measured) screen current = 36.8mA x 390Va-k = 14.4W, which isn't going to kill a decent 6V6 biased in Class A, because that average plate current is going to stay the same. No matter how much voltage swing goes though the plate, the tube is going to stay at 14.4W
Whereas if you had a fixed bias 6V6 stage at 406 and 36.8mA plate current that's 14.9W at idle!, and when you hit it with a big signal, the plate dissipation is going to jump to around 19W, which is not going to do your 6V6 much good running under that condition for very long.