@kingharold +1
Mike
Ditching Class A Amps due to Heat - Sort of a Poll
A discussion elsewhere about the future of Class A made me wonder how true one statement really is. So the questions are...
Have you done away with your Class A Amp due to Heat concerns?
Will you be moving away from Class A Amp due to Heat concerns?
Will you never buy a Class A Amp due to Heat concerns?
I only have a class A/B unit that does Class A up to 6 watts with almost no heat so really can't speak for those who have used in the past or currently own and run Class A Amps.
@kingharold +1 Mike |
@kingharold funny.
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I’ve been running class A tube amps for over 50 years. I’ve been manufacturing them for nearly that long as well. I’ve never liked the heat, so it was really nice to find that after 5 years of R&D that we had a class D product that sounds better than our tube amps. I run them at home now and don’t miss the tubes at all. (FWIW Our OTLs have gotten very nice reviews and awards in the high end press, best sound at show, stuff like that.) What makes an amp sound a certain way is its distortion signature, unless its output impedance is high enough that you run into frequency response colorations as well. Class D amps can have a very low output impedance, eliminating the latter issue and it is possible to have them have similar distortion as tube amps make, meaning they can be smooth through the mids and highs, which is also why people like class A amplifiers in general. Its very likely that I’m the person @brianh61 is referring to with the comment above. I went from class A to class D on account of the sound, nothing else. Class A is doomed at this point; ten years from now class A offerings will be vastly reduced and it will be by market forces and not some ’green’ agenda (which isn’t a thing when it comes to amplifier classes of operation- no one is out to regulate that). |