I will be soon building Class T amplifiers using circuit boards produced by
41 Hz I should be getting some of his AMP 3 boards within the next 2 weeks. These are a major improvement over the Sonic Impact and Tripath evaluation boards.
All the resistors will be precision Metal Film, surface mounts, used to keep noise low. The output inductors will be hand wound toroidals. The wire used to wind them will be 99.9999 % pure copper and cryo-treated. The toroidal inductors will be quite a step up from the inexpensive axials used on the SI and Tripath boards. The toroidals also control RFI better than an air core would.
Also, the other boards use several chokes on the input signal lines, to keep out the RFI (much of it from the output chokes). He has removed the chokes on the signal inputs. One reason is the lower RFI from the toroids and the other reason is that the suggested chokes have a impedance of about 60 ohms at a few megaherz. As these are in series with the input resistor of 20 kohms they do not do any good. A choke like this makes prefect sense in the low impedance power supply connection so he has kept this one but upgraded from a 2A to a 6A rating.
The T-amp uses a 0.33uF input cap with a 20 KRin. No wonder they are known for having poor bass... On the new boards there is a 2.2 uF capacitor giving a corner frequency of 3.6 Hz so low frequency response should be a lot better.
The amp will be built standard with Black Gate N series NP electrolytic caps for coupling. Sonicaps will be an option. Speaker connectors will be Vampire for standard and Eichmann Cable Pods for an upgrade. Cardas RCAs are standard. WBT NextGens are a option.
There will be options for the type of internal wiring used. A volume control and input selector switch will be options.
The battery power supply for the AMP 1 (50 watt per channel) looks like it will be very large and expensive. I am shelving that idea for a bit and I will be building a prototype of this amp with a linear power supply with a toroidal transformer, high speed rectifier diodes and a few Nichicon Super Through filter caps. I will also be using a very exact regulated 5 volt supply for the prototype.
The AMP 3 based product should be available for beta testing in about a month.
I am also very excited about Jim Hagerman's new ideas for a tube DAC. He is planning a product called the Chime
Chime DAC It will have a main board for the tube output and buffer stage and space for a couple of daughter boards for DAC and USB input. He says it may incorporate a selector switch and volume control. If I can squeeze a Tripath amp board in a chassis with this item, we could have a one box tube dac that can take signal from a transport or computer or from a phono stage and amplify it through a Tripath chip.

I am
thinking about just offering the AMP 3 circuit boards as an assembled board. Right now they are only available as an empty board and a few bags of parts. There is some very fine surface mount work need to assemble these boards. Not everyone who would like to experiment with these boards have the skills to assmble one.
I will have to get the boards in and build a couple before I can determine a price I would charge for my labor. This would also include winding the coils. I am thinking in the ball park of $150.00-200.00 for an assembled board. What do all of you think?