But it's not all smooth sailing, or these things would be much more common. One of the nicest things about SET amplifiers is the varying current demand imposed on the B+ power supply is simply the DC polarizing voltage plus the music signal itself. This means you could listen directly to the B+ high voltage supply if you had an isolating transformer ... you'd hear some hum and buzz, of course, but music would be there, and reasonably undistorted, too.
This is NOT true for a balanced circuit. In principle, the demand on the B+ should be constant. This is the usual assumption in engineering textbooks ... a Class A balanced amplifier has steady demand on the supply with no variation. However, there's a giant assumption built in there ... that vacuum tubes are distortionless. Unfortunately, all amplifying devices have distortion, whether they are triodes, tetrodes, pentodes, bipolar transistors, or MOSFETs.
The distortion present in the balanced amplifying elements means they behave something like a balanced diode bridge, or AM modulator. The audio signal that appears on the B+ supply, though reduced 30 to 35 dB due to common-mode rejection, is quite distorted. This means the power-supply distortion of the output stage MUST NOT appear in the preceding stages. This mechanism, of distortion transfer from output to input, is another reason that push-pull amplifiers can have an irritating and fatiguing distortion.
The solution is full isolation of the output stage from the input and driver sections. The B+ regulators in the Blackbird have isolation of greater than -130 dB from input to output ... and that's just one regulator. For modulation noise to traverse from 300B regulation to the input 6SN7, it has to pass through a cascade of three regulators: the 300B regulator, the driver section regulator, and the VR tubes that shunt-regulate the input tubes. In addition, the input tubes operate in balanced mode, which provides another 30 to 35 dB of isolation.
By contrast, a typical push-pull amplifier of vintage design will only have simple RC (resistor-capacitor) filtering between input and output sections. The RC filter (mostly) removes hum and buzz, but when the amp clips, the whole amp clips all at once, like a guitar amp. That multisection clipping is great for a guitar amp, but not good at all for a hifi amp. A typical "audiophile" amp of modern vintage will have regulation for the input section, but not much else, so when the output section folds down, the regulator will fall out of regulation with a sharp transient.
The Blackbird (and the Karna) have full isolation from stage to stage. Each stage even has its own star ground. When the output section changes modes from Class A to Class AB (with loads lower than 2 ohms), or Class AB2 (gross overdrive), there is no effect on the input or the driver. They behave like the 2-watt driver amp that they are. Surprisingly, this has an effect at much lower levels, including background listening. Not quite sure why that is.