0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 43651 times.
Audiophiles are some of the last to admit to change occurring. I'm on my 2nd Class D. My current Temple Audio mono-blocks are smaller, cheaper, and sound better than the 10 year old ones they replaced. Just evolution in design. Be flexible or cease to exist.
Class D has really come a long way...as with any newer technology, it takes its own time to mature and I think we might be at a point where it really is, it can sing and can only improve over time. I remember my W4S amps that I bought couple of yrs ago and regretted. Its no longer the case with the newer offerings from BO and Hypex and I am quiet happy with the sound they make, until I hear a better one, off-coarse. However, my interest is still peaked to know how they compare with the high $$$ amps from Soulutions, Darts, LAMMs, Dags, VACs, Pass XS, CH etc - I know it wouldn't be a fair comparison from the price perspective but its interesting to see from purely sound qualitywise.
One disadvantage with a Class D, is the inability to tube roll. Swapping different power tubes alone can make a tremendous difference in sound.
In the process of building his SIT amplifiers, Pass has learned how to use a new generation of much higher power density, more linear MOSFETs from IXYS, IRF, Fairchild and others. The first amplifier using these new devices is the Pass XA25. It is unmatched in linearity and uses only two devices per channel. I do not think a PWM amplifier will ever match the transient performance of the XA25, simple because of part count. Bloggers should go listen to one of these before selling Class A short.
Good point. Class A and B are limited in how far down they can push cost/performance because they need heatsinks and a larger power supply. Also, while not necessarily the case, Class A and B amps "traditionally" use mains-frequency transformers which inherently means a certain size and weight. Whereas Class D often comes with SMPS, which also (from what I can tell) is getting better quickly.To the earlier point about EMI, this (it seems to me) is one of the things that has improved a lot. 15 years ago I think it was a real problem (IIRC), but I don't think it's true anymore to generalize with "One huge byproduct is massive amounts of noise (EMI)".I'm inclined to think of the adoption curve:
So classD makes a nice summer amp? Nothing wrong with classD. But everything has a flavor of some kind, so I don't expect everyone to like it, or like class A or anything else. It's too subjective to think there is some sort of truly dominate, well, anything.
It seems like you think I was talking to you, Mike, or about your amp? I was not. But you are welcome to send me one that I can get a listen to.
Well, neither will happen anytime soon. I wouldnt mind stopping by our mutual friend's for a visit some time (who has your amp). I would have to start with a passport.
They actually deploy motion trackers that look for a pattern. I will leave the fence jumping to you. I have stood in the middle gap before, where there are no trees. Its quite a site.