below is an excerpt from tube CAD on the transformer coupled P-P cathode follower output stage. the lower distortion can be alluring, however, with such high grid swings needed, you'd need a PS with higher V+ to achieve the swing needed for the driver stage to drive the output stage to full power - or you live with reduced output power. even though the output impedance is lower, you use the similar values for OT since the cathode currents and voltage swings are similar to that of the plate loaded design.
when you were designing your tube mic-pre (the first one), i worked up my own model using a P-P cathode coupled output stage up to the point that cine-mag gave me quote for the OT. i pulled the plug on the whole mess when the light bulb went off about the grid V swing requirements and tilted PS requirements to drive to full power. i suppose i could have used a V doubler of sorts for the PS, but that's another story of lost interest.
This reversal greatly reduces the distortion and output impedance, but at the cost of no gain and, thus, the need for huge grid voltage swings. Input voltage swings of 300 to 400 volts peak are commonly needed, as the cathodes must experience the same voltage swings that the plates would experience in a grounded-cathode transformer-coupled amplifier. Furthermore, because this amplifier will undergo the same voltage and current swings as it more conventional cousin, the grounded-cathode push pull amplifier, similar plate-to-plate load impedances are used (in spite of the cathode follower's much lower output impedance).
CF operation does not change the IV dynamics that the tube must undergo. For example, when using a single cathode follower circuit, we do not load a 6DJ8 with a 200-ohm cathode resistor (twice the effective output impedance), even though that value would adhere the 2rp rule; rather we use something like 10-20k.
Here's a quick thought experiment. Take sum of half of the output tube's rp placed in parallel and half of the primary winding's DCR value and one fourth of the primary winding's reflected impedance and divide this sum into the B+ voltage. For example, given a total of four 2A3s, a B+ voltage of 250 volts, a plate-to-plate reflected impedance of 2400 ohms, and a primary DCR of 200 ohms, the result would be 227mA (250 / [800/2 + 2400/4 + 200/2]). The result is (roughly) the peak current that the tube will undergo when the cathode and grid voltages are equal. This current flow against the half the primary winding's DCR value and one fourth of the primary winding's reflected impedance will give you half of the peak voltage that will develop across the primary. For example, given the previous values, the result is 159 volts. If you play with various values, you will see that something close to 2rp works best.
A common-cathode resistor can be used in place of the fixed bias voltage by placing the resistor in series with the output transformer's center tap and ground. The primary's DCR (DC resistance) becomes part of the cathode bias circuit.