The Truth about Modern Class D


All my amps right now are Class D. ICEpower in the living room, and NAD D 3020 in the bedroom.

I’ve had several audiophiles come to my home and not one has ever said "Oh, that sounds like Class D."

Having said this, if I could afford them AND had the room, I’d be tempted to switch for a pair of Ayre monoblocks or Conrad Johnson Premiere 12s and very little else.

I’m not religious about Class D. They sound great for me, low power, easy to hide, but if a lot of cash and the need to upgrade ever hits me, I could be persuaded.

The point: Good modern Class D amps just sound like really good amplifiers, with the usual speaker/source matching issues.

You don’t have to go that route, but it’s time we shrugged off the myths and descriptions of Class D that come right out of the 1980’s.
erik_squires

George,

You are so yesterday.....he he. Check this link out.....no, they are not mosfets as Mouser has no category for them at present.....download the data sheet.....these are $5.50 each and anyone can buy them when they arrive in Nov. They also have higher current ones for $8 each due in Oct.

https://www.mouser.com/ProductDetail/GaN-Systems/GS61004B-E01-MR?qs=sGAEpiMZZMvplms98TlKYzJ7xUKby2GKgG%2funvqgEAPyX8Mt10R2gA%3d%3d

What so funny is that you only need a couple of these per channel to make multi-hundred watt amps. These are only slightly more expensive than the mosfets everyone is using now.

The revolution is happening. Get rid of those heavy boat anchors before they are worthless!

Class D Output filters are load dependent. From TI:
The LC filter response also varies with speaker load impedance. The load impedance determines the damping ratio of the output LC filter and is classified as overdamped, critically damped, or underdamped. It is also important to understand the speaker load impedance variations for the application and select the L and C values that suit the expected load variations. Ideally, the LC filter value is selected for a critically damped, flat passband, and phase response. Two considerations when selecting components for the second-order low-pass filter is the cutoff frequency and Q factor or damping ratio.

Like any other amplifier, Class D will interact with non-linear speaker impedances. There are multiple output filter topologies and each will interact differently with different loads.

Stating that 1.5GHz will solve all the problems is as silly as saying a 10MHz Class AB bandwidth has to sound better than 100KHz.

As far as GaN devices, there have been countless ’type’ as the new sliced bread for the entire history of electronics, be it tube, transformer, transistor, FET, IC, etc.

ALL electronics involve a compromise and ALL electronics interact with their source and load.

Specific recommendations border on risible.

You might have a point George.... I just did a quick Google search and came up with this article....


https://phys.org/news/2018-07-path-high-performance-transistors.html

If indeed Gallium Nitrite transistors may be applied to push into the Ghz switching frequencies for 5G transmitters, they will need to be eventually supplied by mainstream/major fabs... Perhaps we will see more high speed GaN transistors before long.


BTW, I did not know that Soulution is already using GaN technology.


G.

  

 

ricevs
  they are not mosfets as Mouser has no category for them at present.....

You need to read and comprehend better. Go back and read my post again.

I never said they were, your going off half cocked again.  
What I said, the inventors of these new GAN devices (EPC. Group)
YET TO BE TAKEN UP BY THE MAJOR MANUFACTURERS (just in-case you have bad eyes).
Were also responsible for inventing the power Mosfet years ago.
" Alex Lidow, Ph.D. CEO and Co-founder

Alex joined International Rectifier (NYSE:IRF) as an R&D engineer and is the co-inventor of the HEXFET power MOSFET, a power transistor that displaced the bipolar transistor and launched modern power conversion."

guidocorona3,975 posts09-04-2018 8:50am

You might have a point George.... I just did a quick Google search and came up with this article....


https://phys.org/news/2018-07-path-high-performance-transistors.html

If indeed Gallium Nitrite transistors may be applied to push into the Ghz switching frequencies for 5G transmitters, they will need to be eventually supplied by mainstream/major fabs... Perhaps we will see more high speed GaN transistors before long.


Thank you for digging this up G, maybe now the doubters will "back off"

It’s frustrating when posters like last one I had to address, skip read something get it all ****** up, before their mouths spew forth.

BTW, I did not know that Soulution is already using GaN technology.
That’s is interesting they have applied it to linear amplifiers, maybe used in their power supplies for full rail regulation? The only power amp I knew of that did that was the old Naim 250, nice sounding but didn't like Quad 57's, it oscillated and blew up, in the first second of turn on. 

Cheers George