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They are a priori snobs. What their particular thoughts on this particular subject makes them is simply ill-informed. But being ill-informed is pretty much the "audiophile's" lot, so really nothing new there at all.
All equipment falls short of live music. So, we put systems together that get one the closest based on their preferences. Since preferences, differ, the solution differ.
The Hypex amp modules (UcD as well as Ncore), and the newer (ASX2, System 7) Icepower modules both seem to fix most of the traditional problems of Class D, though.But not all of them.Jim
I, for one, would like to see some scientific research done into whatever aspect of Class D amplification apparently causes some people to lose any sense of civility when they are in contact with it or involved in discussion regarding it... Let's work towards a cure.D.D.
what does this post even mean? You've never had any of these in your system.
A quick explanation of how a class D amp works.http://www.axiomaudio.com/1500-amplifier#t-5
There are preferences grounded in reality (i.e. actual differences, such as between speakers with consistent midrange directivity and speakers that throw a mushroom cloud of excess midrange energy into the room at the bottom of the tweeter's passband) and there are preferences that lack any foundation whatsoever in the real world (i.e. most of what so called audiophiles blather about). I focus on optimizing the former to my tastes, which tends to give better results than wasting one's time with nonexistent idiocies. PS: Have you yet bothered to check out any of the Powercube results of real amps published by The Audio Critic, or did that topic become uninteresting when the existence of actual data constrained your ability to render unfounded speculation on what the device might "prove" about your mythology?
Interesting discussion, please carry on. I am considering amplification, and trying to learn as much as possible. So far, the most salient point, I think, is DS-21's comments about impedance loads affecting frequency response with some amps (tube and class D, from what I can tell, perhaps other topologies as well?).
Having both SS and Tube amps, the SS being around 425 per channel (4ohm) and the tube about 110, I find the tube amp to flesh out all the detail and has just as much dynamics. But that is in my system and YMMV.
As for class D, I'm not aware of a Hypex-based amp that was measured into Stereophile's simulated load, but here is how the Icepower 125ASX2 module, as found in a recent Bel Canto integrated amp, measures into the same simulated load:
When we see speakers with a specified frequency response of +-1.5dB, we think of them as pretty darn nice.An amp that stays within that spec should be just fine too. And what if the speaker being driven has a "dip" in the midrange where the tube amp has an extra dB to give? The only way to really know how the amp will "sound" is to hook it up to the speakers and let 'er rip.
+2. And probably time for someone to provide a link to Atma-sphere's paper on power vs. voltage paradigms. So I will channel Ralph and give this: http://www.atma-sphere.com/Resources/Paradigms_in_Amplifier_Design.php