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
Seems to be very easy on this forum to attract attention for theories that have nothing to do with what you have heard much less owned and it is the same posters over and over in thread after thread.  When you have an opinion of a technology much less a product tell us when you actually heard it and under what circumstances.  It is pretty obvious that these members have never owned the products in question.  If so tell us what they were. 
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We have George repeating over and over and over and over and over and over.....he he..... about phase shift due to filter effects....trouble is, he is guessing about its sonic effect. He knows nothing because he has not heard anything......he is just talking.

Ok, were stooping down to that level.

Many of us know your comments are biased and maybe in it for the monitory gain, and you’ll say anything because of this, and your protection of it.
http://tweakaudio.com/EVS-2/EVS_1200_amplifier.html
I have no financial interest in Class-D at all, just what I hear and others report..


erik_squires
Prove either is audible and unpleasant first.

As others have have stated, explained, and explored no one hear owes you any proof, documentation, or substantiation of anything hear at all if you seek reliable, testable, repeatable, proof you are of course welcome to collect, formulate, and collate you're own but to insist, demand, and compel others to do your work hear for your sole benefit is I believe what is in English called "presumptuous."

erik_squires
"
The problem is audibility and connecting that to any particular technical choice"

When audiophiles, engineers, and expert listeners report results that are substantially similar with a given design, topology, or methodology it is a pretty safe observation, deduction, and conclusion that the design, topology, or methodology is responsible for the outcome and result regarding performance.