In my non engineer opinion, I would think that less distortion, lower noise floor and better capacitance would lead to SOME inprovement in sound however I can only base this on a direct comparison from ST to SST/2 but would still think that at low to moderate volumes, you would be able to have a better sound in general.
I can definately say that the SST/2 amps are more speaker friendly with tough loads.
Let the specs speak and sound:
SPECIFICATIONS AVAILABLE TO ALL SST² AMPLIFIERS
Distortion < 0.005% from 20Hz to 20kHz at rated output into 8 Ohms
IM or THD+noise < 0.007% from 20Hz to 20kHz at rated output into 4 Ohms
Noise
(Measured with input shorted; 20Hz. to 20kHz.)
>110dB below rated output @ 29dB gain (-75dBu)
>113dB below rated output @ 23dB gain (-78dBu)
>116dB below rated output @ 17dB gain (-78dBu)*
*setting available on models 6B & 9B only
Slew rate Greater than 60 volts per microsecond
Power bandwidth From less than 1 Hz to over 100 kHz
Damping factor Over 300 at 20 Hz, ref. 8 Ohms
Input Impedance 2B, 3B, 4B, 6B, 9B - 50k Ohms single ended, 40k Ohms balanced
7B, 14B, 28B - 15k Ohms single ended, 20k Ohms balanced
SPECIFICATIONS AVAILABLE TO ALL SST AMPLIFIERS
Distortion < 0.005% from 20Hz to 20kHz at rated output into 8 Ohms
IM or THD+noise < 0.007% from 20Hz to 20kHz at rated output into 4 Ohms
Noise
(Measured with input shorted; 20Hz. to 20kHz.)
>110dB below rated output @ 29dB gain (-75dBu)
>113dB below rated output @ 23dB gain (-78dBu)
>116dB below rated output @ 17dB gain (-78dBu)*
*setting available on models 6B & 9B only
Slew rate Greater than 60 volts per microsecond
Power bandwidth From less than 1 Hz to over 100 kHz
Damping factor Over 300 at 20 Hz, ref. 8 Ohms
Input Impedance 50k Ohms single-ended, 20k Ohms balanced (10k each leg)
Music is just emotion and Bryston (NRB, ST, SST etc.) is a beautiful product.
