The Class D Audio 250 meets the Wyred4Sound STI-500 integrated amp. Yesterday Kent J. hosted an amp comparison with my new modified Class D Audio 250 amp to compare it to the Wyred4Sound STI-500 integrated amp he has in for review. Both produce 250 wpc into 8 ohms. The W4S produces 500 wpc in 4 ohms while the Class D's Mosfets don't quite double down. We listened to the W4S first on his stock Maggie 1.6's and using his new Sony XA5400ES multiplayer which has a very nice internal DAC btw. We listened mainly to redbook CD's.
As a good comparison, we then listened to the Class D (dBop as I call it) using the W4S's internal preamp. After a couple hours or so of this setup we switched to Kent's Dodd tube pre with the dBop.
There were three of us GASSERS who witnessed: Kent, Mark and myself. The overall consensus was the dBop sounded better. As Mark said, "It (the W4S) had better bass when used as an integrated, but it didn't match your amp's smoothness and musicality." Kent felt like the dBop was simply easier to listen to.
To me the W4S sounded more "electronic". It called more attention to itself and how it was reproducing the music. The highs were grainier, the mids weren't as warm and musical as the dBop's. The bass was about equal to me. The W4S produced fast tight bass with excellent control over the maggie's bass panels as did the dBop. With the W4S, however, I kept noticing things like a tad of sibilance on vocals or a bit of grittiness on cymbals--things that caught my attention that I don't hear in my system.
The dBop OTOH just seemed to get out of the way of the music and disappear. The sound was more natural, liquid and organic to the point that you quickly forgot about focusing on what the amp was doing and just immersed yourself in the music. I also noticed the soundstage to be a bit wider with the dBop to my ears.
As I said earlier, I'm a tube guy and adding some tubes into the mix with the dBop is the best way to go IMO. Running the dBop with the Dodd preamp took the sound up another notch. The sound was a tad fuller and richer with better instrumental timbers (all the things tubes do so well) without being overly euphonic or plump. The soundstage was a bit denser and wider.
Overall it was a fun session for all of us. I will say the W4S is extremely well built. The fit and finish was top knotch and it's built like a tank. I like the no-nonsense contemporary design and the phase flip function on the remote was interesting to play with. Mark was particularly emamored with that button.

We listened mostly to acoustic music. Some of the tunes that I can remember were:
Tierney Sutton: Something Cool
KD Lang: Hymns of the 49th Parallel
Miles Davis: Someday My Prince Will Come Remastered
Palle Daniellson: Opening
Brian Bromberg: Wood
Jacques Loussier Trio: The Four Seasons
Rob Wasserman: various
Fiona Apple: Extraordinary Machine
The Corrs: Live in Dublin
unfortunately, we neglected to play some Julie London, who watched over the entire session.

steve


Kent and Mark

Mark channels Tierney Sutton

W4S on the medal podium as Julie looks on.

Running hte dBop through the W4S's preamp

the dBop on the medal stand

My amp with the supercharged heatsink. Funky speaker connections huh???


Kent's rack

The Dodd and Sony