I spent some quality time with my scope and a couple amps. Firstly, looking at a LTP, 100k plate loads, 24k tail, 744 ohm cathode, no negative feedback, into a post pi master, taking out the grid clamp. It would clip on the bottom first, then widen as the signal was increased. This widen was on both sides of the PI, too, meaning the top widened on the inverted side mirroring the other side. There wasn't one magic side.
However, dropping the plate load on the input side to 82k made it symmetrical in the sense that both sides clipped concurrently, but pushing significantly more signal could then widen the bottom, looking at the speaker output. Dropping that plate load lower could then even it out. Perhaps, not surprisingly, the symmetry or asymmetry is more about what you do to the LTP. Interestingly, the express two rock dissected to make the ruby had a 75k there, two 150k's in parallel. I maintain that the intent with the stock express's pi is to be symmetrical. The scope traces on the linked site are a clone, not the real deal as tubed by Ken, so it's a matter of interpretation as to whether the lengthening of the duty cycle on the bottom is "trainwreck magic."
In terms of bias shift in fixed bias amps, that is very much real from the grid clamp. That's why there's crossover distortion. The 3rd stage swings a lot more voltage in one way than the other, so one side will be pushed harder into grid clamp which is the asymmetry I was referring. Of course, what's happening in the linked page scope pics happens when the 3rd stage is clean, so Martin is probably right that the widening of the bottom half in that particular amp is from slamming the PI. What's going on in the PI, I suspect is because it is cathode biased. I wonder if a CCS would stay symmetrical longer...
Just for the fun of it, I put my old Express on the scope, set the same way as the linked site. I've always maintained that the Express PI is its achilles heel, contributing to the hiss, the lack of bass, etc. So, my amp has the PI mod I always recommend 39k tail, 1k cathode...along with .047 coupling caps, 68k feedback resistor, etc...
I apologize for the photo quality, my only excuse is that it's an iphone and a $5 salvation army scope.
Here's just starting to clip...
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http://theinside.net/twreck/Scoped/1.JPG[/img]
Here's some more drive...
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http://theinside.net/twreck/Scoped/2.JPG[/img]
A lot less crossover distortion
Still more....
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http://theinside.net/twreck/Scoped/3.JPG[/img]
Here we're seeing the widening of the duty cycle on the bottom like the other pics....
However, things get interesting as we push more...
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http://theinside.net/twreck/Scoped/4.JPG[/img]
It starts to course correct and the crossover notch starts to become less apparent....
Still more drive and...
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http://theinside.net/twreck/Scoped/5.JPG[/img]
looks like a pretty symmetrical square wave with very little crossover distortion notch. It's very narrow on the rise and fall though, like the crossover went from horizontal to vertical...
I was somewhat surprised how different this amp looked.