Cobaltturbo-
I realize that the Arcam is Class G, but it is highly biased to run in Class A for the first 20 watts. I believe that information is on Arcam's website and if it isn't it is definitely on the review of the Arcam AVR600 by Peter Moncrief at the IAR80 review page and at Widescreen website review.
Most manufacturers only use a single voltage rail, but the higher and lower voltage rails on the Arcam AVR600 classify it as a Class G device. But Arcam chose to bias the first 20 watts (where the vast majority of music resides) because it sounds far better than a regular A/B bias, which doesn't follow the full wave pattern as Class A does. The use of Class G (higher and lower voltage rails)by Arcam allowed them to have a considerable heat savings which permitted them the luxury of using those savings for a large amount of Class A biasing (which emits far more heat than the classic A/B that is used in most receivers).
But Arcam's brilliant engineering allowed them to use this tremendous heat savings with the addition of Class A.
All other receiver manufacturers use a single voltage rail system, which must be on all the time. Arcam employs a higher and lower voltage rail (Class G), with the lower rail using far less power and emitting far less heat than the higher voltage rail. Since most music doesn't require the higher voltage rails, Arcam is able to utilize the substantial heat and power savings by biasing heavily into Class A.
I have bought a Panasonic V25 65" Plasma which made me have to place my sofa at the rear wall. This means I must employ a 5.1 system, as opposed to being able to use a 7.1.
Greg
I realize that the Arcam is Class G, but it is highly biased to run in Class A for the first 20 watts. I believe that information is on Arcam's website and if it isn't it is definitely on the review of the Arcam AVR600 by Peter Moncrief at the IAR80 review page and at Widescreen website review.
Most manufacturers only use a single voltage rail, but the higher and lower voltage rails on the Arcam AVR600 classify it as a Class G device. But Arcam chose to bias the first 20 watts (where the vast majority of music resides) because it sounds far better than a regular A/B bias, which doesn't follow the full wave pattern as Class A does. The use of Class G (higher and lower voltage rails)by Arcam allowed them to have a considerable heat savings which permitted them the luxury of using those savings for a large amount of Class A biasing (which emits far more heat than the classic A/B that is used in most receivers).
But Arcam's brilliant engineering allowed them to use this tremendous heat savings with the addition of Class A.
All other receiver manufacturers use a single voltage rail system, which must be on all the time. Arcam employs a higher and lower voltage rail (Class G), with the lower rail using far less power and emitting far less heat than the higher voltage rail. Since most music doesn't require the higher voltage rails, Arcam is able to utilize the substantial heat and power savings by biasing heavily into Class A.
I have bought a Panasonic V25 65" Plasma which made me have to place my sofa at the rear wall. This means I must employ a 5.1 system, as opposed to being able to use a 7.1.
Greg