Here is my suggestion for a rather simple way to test for RFI radiated from the speaker wires. Buy a small portable AM/FM radio and check for AM and FM bandwidth interference by holding the radio near the speaker wires while playing music through the amp.
Scotty
Lastly, Mr. Haskins I appreciate your regard for the consumers and professionalism in the way you do business. I wonder how your amp modules compare to the Nuforces as these type of amps appeal to me more than the SS monsters. I feel like I am tending to lean more to the DIY in audio like the rest of the other fields that I have always done myself (maybe I am just cheap
)I am looking forward to the completion of the Exodus 2641 kit as I am getting close (finally).
I hope this thread continues so I can try to put some of the pieces together and come away with a new understanding (wish I knew more about electronics - would read more but soooo many projects on the go and in mind)
Thanks,
Mike
Thanks for the kind words. Get those 2641s done!
There are plenty of people that have done comparisons between Hypex & other Class D solutions. Just keep digging...... My own opinion is fairly obvious.

The main advantages of the UcD designs is that their frequency response doesn't vary with load and their distotortion spectrum doesn't change much with output level. The rest of the UcD advantages have to do with design skill at the board level. Bruno is just better at laying out the PCB and making the right layout and component choices to minimize emissions. He is just a better engineer and understands the design choices better than our competition.
Many of the Class D solutions use switching power supplies also. Once again, there is nothing wrong with a properly designed SMPS but they are a potential noise problem in poor designs. For me.... it was just easier to avoid the potential design hurdles and use a more traditional transformer/rectifier/capacitor bank supply. The downside is weight, cost and size. None of those are that big of a concern with high-end audio. In fact a hefty amplifier is often considered a GOOD thing. It keeps that 1" thick garden hose power cord from lifting your amp off the rack.
