Common Collector (bypass cap on Collector, signal to next stage coming from Emitter) is a Current Amplifier, also called an Emitter Follower, where the Emitter Voltage "follows" the Base Voltage, minus the 0.7v Voltage drop across the Base/Emitter Diode region. This is what they designed the Jackson and HR series to use.
The mod
@sp5it posted changes the Predriver from Common Collector to Common Emitter, by moving the bypass cap to the Emitter side, and feeding the next stage from the Collector, which makes it now a Voltage Amplifier. This increases the amount of RF each following stage receives from the previous.
I seem to remember having an adjusted 8w carrier on AM or FM before making this change, then after changing, it jumps up to at least 15w carrier, which needs to be readjusted back down to 8w. On SSB, this added at least an additional 5-10 watts to the PEP (clean on a scope pattern, ALC intact). The AM PEP (on scope) also increased, as there is now more "Headroom" for the RF to be able to use before flat topping (AMC intact too).