When I first heard my first Class D amp on my system it was a revelatory moment. Perhaps the biggest single change in sound ever. The sound changed completely leaving me totally disoriented at first. Totally different. Maybe that’s why some can’t fathom it? Where did the bass go? The imaging and soundstage? Then I tuned in. It’s more organic and articulate and encompassing than ever. Had to open my ears. Whoa! Clean crisp detailed and holographic. Vocals clear and easily understood but no artificial “warmth”. Just smooth and clean. No fatigue lake many SS amps. Like a great restraint had been lifted and now the music was living and breathing unconstrained. You know the way music is supposed to sound. You turn up the volume and it just comes to life. You don’t even realize the actual SPL you are hearing. Like a good tube amp. Except none of that tube bloat and artificial flavoring. Efficiency is a good thing in amps just as it often is in speakers. The amp can do more. That’s it in a nutshell. Class D and Ohm Walsh speakers = game over.
Class D amps seem poised to take over. Then what?
I am certainly biased by my lifetime final amp being a Class D. But I know that after 30+ years of development, Class D seems to be on a high plain. I know there are now many, many companies focusing on Class D and, maybe, a good handful already as good as it gets. My Class D amp is as smooth and beautifully musical as a great tube amp and as punchy and detailed as a great SS amp. I am satisfied and done with my search. A class D amp has effectively taken me off the amp merry-go-round. It’s about time after 50 years. And, for me, this Class D is a milestone. Will all other classes of amps fade away?
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- 329 posts total
- 329 posts total