The Future of Audio Amplification


I have recently paired an Audio Research DS225 Class D amplifier with an Audio Research tube preamplifier (SP8 mkii). I cannot believe how wonderful and lifelike my music sounds. The DS225 replaced an Audio Research SD135 Class AB amplifier. Perhaps the SD135 is just not as good as some of the better quality amps that are out there, but it got me thinking that amazingly wonderful sonance can be achieved with a tubed pre and Class D amp. I have a hunch that as more people experience this combination, it will likely catch on and become the future path of many, if not most audiophile systems. It is interesting that Audio Research has been at the forefront of this development.
distortions
IMHO, the underlying question to the future of class D is:

Who is going to buy super exotic (expensive) USED amplifiers? Recalling the TAS March 2016 review of my Audio Alchemy stereo amp and dac/pre @ was $1995 each. The reviewer, Robert Harley (gave them Editors Choice Award)  compared their sound to the Soulution amp/pre which I think was priced near $60,000: the reviewer  noted that both were designed by Peter Madnik, and that the AA components were not sonically that far off of the uber expensive, and highly praised Soulution components 

Here's a great quote from erik in his AudioGon class D thread:  "Sighted or blind, I cannot hear a difference between them an Parasound A23s. None. Zero. Nada."

Now I owned Parasound A 23, several W4S stereo/mono/ multi channel amps, Emerald Physics 100.2 SE monos and now my Audio Alchemy stereo amp, and I can definitely hear the generational improvements, and the AA (apparently with HypeX modules) stands way above those that I owed. The AA amp had considerably more wallop than the 4xs as expensive (MSRP) EPs, which can often be ha for ~$2000 the pair these days 

Snippet from Stereophile August 2016 (according to review the stereo amp is essentially the same topology as the monos):

"Madnick told me that, inside the DPA-1M, the signal is fed to a differential pair of JFETs feeding a low-power MOSFET driver stage. The circuit is servo-controlled to cancel any offset and to avoid having to use coupling capacitors in the signal path. This input circuit is powered by a dedicated power supply with ultra-low-noise voltage regulators. The class-D Hypex output module is powered from a switching power supply. The DPA-1M is a bridged design, which Madnick considers "the best-sounding way to do it." Of course, the sonic characteristics of the DPA-1M depend not only on its circuit topologies, but on the choice of specific components, PCB layout, and fabrication materials, as well as the selection of internal wiring and, one assumes, various proprietary factors. 

There was certainly nothing about the sound that screamed "class-D." In fact, had I been told that I was listening to a high-power class-AB amplifier—the kind that would require the help of a friend to lift it—I would have had no reason to doubt the truth of that statement.

Theta comparison;  And so, in a more modest way dictated by its price, is the DPA-1M. Like the Prometheus, it produced no artifacts, and added none of the "clinical" sound for which class-D amplifiers are often criticized. (FURTHER >80% OF THE SONIC GOODNESS AT 1/3 THE PRICE!)"

So, whereas the older class D left many of us wanting, the current and near future of class D is such (IMHO) that people who own uber expensive A/AB amps will already have a hard time getting pennies on the dollar

Read more at https://www.stereophile.com/content/audio-alchemy-dpa-1m-monoblock-power-amplifier-page-2#X4UzH1ZEC5...
Read more at https://www.stereophile.com/content/audio-alchemy-dpa-1m-monoblock-power-amplifier#DaPTJ23tBl4br8kO....
The Tad Evolution class D amps specs quote 1% distortion. I believe most amp designers look to minimize distortion, and I’m sure TAD does as well. I use Spectral and am happy with the lack of distortion,incredible dynamics,nuance,faithfulness to the waveform(read music) and emotional connection this allows. I’m surprised that some argue Class D is equivalent; but we all hear differently and have different sensitivity to distortion. As I listen to live music often; my ear is sensitive to sounds that don’t reflect live. One poster mentioned he found “live” music flat and boring. Obviously there are positions for everyone. If one grows up listening to mp3 perhaps they’ll gravitate to that for a lifetime? I can’t imagine it though. 
John Atkinson measured PS Audio's M700 monoblocks ability to produce 700 watts at 1%, and over 100 watts at 0.005%, both figures into 4 Ohms at 1K. At 30 watts into 4 Ohms, which many of us never exceed at normal listening levels, that number fell to 0.002%. From 20 to 20K at 20V, that number never rose above 0.2% into 4 Ohms; the figures were better into 8 Ohms. Not that distortion tells but a part of the story, is something not to worry about with well-designed Class D amplification.
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Class D amps sound cold and analytical to me. Maybe its all the feedback or the output filter. Meat is ultimately taken off the bones somehow.

Having said that, Class D is the future for better or worse. There is quite a bit of cost savings involved for amp makers. They can be pretty good with a tube pre amp as a bandaid.

I still have never seen a LED TV that can come close to my plasma. Plenty of people will say that LED has gotten better and surpassed plasma.

I guess it comes down to what we value and what properties are important to us. Class D and LED both win in efficiency and that is extended to form factor.