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Came across this article http://www.hometheater.com/content/anthem-statement-m1-amplifier . Basically they review a $3500 1000watt mono block class d amp, and come way less than impressed. They say that class D amps are inherently not good at high frequencies. What do the forum members feel about this point of view. Has classdaudio done things differently.
Power supply capacitor upgrade: I'd like to try upgrading the capacitors in the power supply to the 10,000uF. The Panasonic TSHA series were recommended earlier in this thread, but I can't find a TSHA-series in an 80v value. What about the T-HA series, such as DigiKey part P10645-ND?Even those are $12/each. Six of those would run me $72. Whereas I can get a whole new linear power supply using six 10k uF 80v caps for $54 from ConnexElectronic.Any reason to do the capacitor mod myself versus just getting a whole new PS?
Came across this article http://www.hometheater.com/content/anthem-statement-m1-amplifier . Basically they review a $3500 1000watt mono block class d amp, and come way less than impressed. They say that class D amps are inherently not good at high frequencies. What do the forum members feel about this point of view. Has classdaudio done things differently.My classDs sound pretty good to me at all frequencies. But i am not an audiophile. At least not as yet.
Strong and not well based opinions. He is technically illiterate. Regards
Depends if you believe PS caps can affect sound quality. I do and say if you are going to upgrade then spend a little extra and get Nichicon Fine Gold (avaliable from Mouser). Or go all in and get the Mundorfs from partsconnexion.
He said in his final point, "...listen very carefully, especially to the top octaves and the atmospheric cues on familiar music and movies. Pay particular attention beyond your immediate reaction to instrumental attack, and focus instead on the flow of the sustain and the quality and length of the decay." This is exactly what detractors of Class D are noting, and is what bothers them about fully endorsing the technology.
I've been searching for that description as I couldn't pin down what I was hearing while listening to the Ncores, a different amp than we're talking about here of course, but Class D nonetheless.
Oh, DS-21 is back. Well, that ends that.
That's just purple prose nonsense for "the output filter may interact with the load presented by the speaker in the treble."It's not rocket science. It's just a gain block.Equalize the frequency response, and class D doesn't have a "sound."
I see. So the nuance of sound reproduction - the attack, the decay, the harmonics and their relative phase relationships - can all be made perfect by simple frequency equalization. Brilliant! The physical world is far simpler than I had previously thought!
Also note that we may be somewhat unfair to DS-21 because of his, let's say, blunt presentation sometimes. However you cannot deny that the output filter in Class D amps can affect high frequency response that can vary with different speaker loads. Whether this can be solved by equalization is doubtful IMHO.
I think phase interleaving the transistors to raise the sampling frequency is a much more effective solution, which is what I believe is done with the Ncores and other Class D amps. The data indicate flat frequency response into varied loads to above 20kHz, so it's not a frequency response problem that equalization can solve.
Do tripath amps share the same "issue" in re high frequency as the class D amps?