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I believe Channel Islands employs Mr. Putzey's technology. My take-away from his article is that Class D amps do not offer a real sonic improvement over conventional solid state amps. Please correct me if I'm wrong
it all depends on the listener. Recent generation of class-D amps are well liked by many, otherwise the number of channels of class-D amp sold wouldn't have been more than 50 millions and growing, taking into account the fact some good linear amp ICs sell for peanuts, i.e. $0.75 per channel.
iPod is for the mobile generation and got well deserved success, even though personally I will never buy one - listening compressed music with earphone is not for me. Eventually a version of uncompressed iPod can become a convenient music server. I bet that will happen soon, maybe they'll come from modders first.
"The above reminded me of the # of IPODs being sold / IPOD sound quality"Fur under 50W, linear amp ICs are MUCH cheaper than class-D amps, integrated or not. The Patek chip amp is high-end in audio performance - according to 6moon and some AC posters - and riduculously high priced for a hand-wired breadboard and fancy heatsinking/chassis. It electronic content is maybe < $10-15. No electronic R&D. Why, its designer is mechanical engineer.iPod is for the mobile generation and got well deserv ...
Off topic, but have you ever looked in a Patek amp? The designer likes to use expensive parts, like blackgate caps, riken and caddock resistors. Your $10-15 figure is off by at least a factor of 10. And, his time is not free, so you need to factor in that these are hand built, and hand wired. I highly doubt Peter is getting rich off of amps.Randy
Um, I don't read content on audioholics, but I don't see how "Class D" can be a misnomer, any more than class A, or B, or whatever...
Both are great articles and there is plenty of good points here.In terms of subjective opinions on the amps vs. the objective measurements that topic is never going to be settled.
Probably not.I tend to lean towards measurements not always being able to identify all of the benefits of a product. But they can often show when a product has problems.I also feel that, if measurements aren't telling us what we need to know, then we need to come up with better measurements.I'd say that something that shows major problems is not a product I want to spend further time on. So measurements are certainly useful in that case.Beyond that I think I'll keep my opinions to myself.