El: many switching amps have gone to a design that uses a very high / fast switching frequency. This moves the potential for in-band noise of any measurable amplitude further away from reality. As such, some such designs offer excellent linearity out to well beyond 80 KHz or so with minimal distortion. If everything is done right, that means that the amp will have the speed to pass a square wave with good linearity up to at least 8 KHz. Anything above that frequency, in terms of musical notes or test signals, would be hit or miss depending on the individual design.
Other units, with a lower switching frequency, lower hinge frequency for the filtering, poorer transient response, lack of stability with diverse loads, etc... tend to produce high frequency roll-off and in-band phase shifts at frequencies that are closer to mid-band reproduction.
My guess is that you personally know all of this, so we are pretty much discussing this for the edification of those that aren't as familiar with such things. : ) Sean
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