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Please correct me if I'm wrong here, but I believe at least some GAS amps (Ampzilla) are SE Class A.
I owned an Amzilla, have had many visits with James B., know his work well and I can assure you GAS never made any single ended amps. James never mentioned SE amps and I would be surprised if he ever would in any positive way. He was not an SE guy. His interest was always good specs, low distortion, high damping; good sounding classic design. Smart guy, I miss him. His early work was at SAE and all those amps were push-pull class AB which is written AB not A/B.
Speaking of Class A amps, I just got in a Electrocompaniet AW2-120 that runs Class A. Electrocompaniet makes some the best sounding solid state sounding gear available at any price. The amp has outstanding clarity, and exhibits virtually none of the artifacts associated with solid state electronics. It displays better dynamics than many other solid state amps that have more rated power. Electrocompaniet has proprietary circuitry that addresses Transient Inter-modulation Distortion (TID) for solid state amps, and trust me when I tell you, it works in spades. The AW2-120 has all the positive aspects one would expect from Class A, and some of the cleanest sound available at any price point. Transient intermodulation distortion, or TIM (TID), occurs in amplifiers that employ negative feedback when signal delays make the amplifier incapable of correcting distortion when exposed to fast, transient signals.http://www.ka-electronics.com/images/pdf/Leinonen_Otala_Curl_TIM_Measurement.pdf
Do you know if James ever designed any amps at GAS or Sumo that were push-pull class A, or was this basically where Nelson really came into the picture in terms of historical solid state design significance?
I dont know why Nelson makes them?..Are they that good?I like class a of tubes but no of solid state...
Have you ever build a class-a?the power they consume is HUGE!!!as for nelson i have the greatest of respect!!
Have you ever build a class-a?the power they consume is HUGE!!!
While not "good for the planet" I really don't think there are enough people on the planet using excessive energy (powering their Class A amps) to make a significant negative impact on the environment.
From the First Watt FAQ page:"Frequently Asked QuestionsQ: Isn't Class A bad for the environment?A: Everything is bad for the environment, in case you haven't noticed. When I look at the cost of enjoying my 25 watt/ch class A amplifier as compared to watching a big screen television or running a porch light all night, I see that I get as much or more value for the same sort of consumption. If I drive down the hill to shop at Fry's, I consume about as much power as running one of my amplifiers for 2 hours a day for a year. So I go to Fry's less often, and I turn the amp off when I'm done."........and then there is this:
Isn't anyone building a sensible 10-20 watt Class A transistor amp these days? At that power level things are reasonable and its enough power for many applications. With today's more sensitive speakers a few watts gets plenty of sound for my ears. Keep in mind this will only appeal to those who know that you don't need but so much headroom. For 1 watt average I believe 10 watts is adequate. Good amps are low distortion right up to clipping. Headroom is over-rated by those who don't understand what is really going on in amplifiers. I invite anyone to give me a cogent argument why one needs a 100 watt amp to play a few watts. A note on clipping: I have a scope in my music rack and turn it on often to see where I am in relation to clipping. I have found with many good listeners that slight clipping a few percent of the time is not noticed. This notion that we need a 100 watt amp to play 1 watt needs to be dispelled. When it comes to playing CDs or a music sever the headroom can be calculated precisely. A CD player puts out 2 volt period. It can all be figured from there. With a proper gain amplifier (no preamp needed) one could set up the volume control so that at full volume the amp would never, ever clip because it couldn't
The OP asked "who makes amps with class A bias" I don't think we have found one yet. They do exist but you will likely find them in lower power ratings simply because of the high dissipation.