What I did state is that Class D designs tend to sacrifice fidelity in favor of efficiency, which is true in most cases.
This is the bias I was trying to answer, my apologies I did not connect my statements more clearly to your writing. I am unable to support this statement based on any evidence at all.
I do believe that Class D is in a much wider quality range of products than Class A. By this I mean from cheap portable music players to high end.
Class D is, numerically, overwhelmingly dominant and across every market segment, while the ONLY place in audio I know of with Class A being produced today is high end, often mono-blocks. (There’s probably some Bugatti with Class A amps, but lets get real) This may lead us to make unfair apples to oranges comparisons which don’t actually tell us much about the overall potential of Class D.
At the high end, I see no sacrifices being made for Class D except to my carbon footprint. I DO hear differences in amplifiers. However to hear those differences and say "OH, well Class D is inferior, so the A/B amp must be better sounding" is an snobby prejudice. There are even some strong benefits, as some have very high damping factors (output impedance) and therefore more consistent performance across speakers.
I think that the subjectivity of the "high-end" can be quite trendy, or go pretty far from neutrality. If that keeps a Class D from reaching top-tier status, then it's just a matter of time before a vendor creates the right input buffer for you.
Again, to everyone, please please buy what you like to hear, but let’s not use cost as our golden calf of determining what’s best.
Best,
Erik