So, you are clearly stating that changing parts does not matter because you have no test results that show that they do? As long as the amp measures the way you want then it does not matter what part you use? You earlier stated that a LOT of what I said could be measured. Now you are stating that you just measure the amp and as long as it measures OK..it is. You just keep measuring it so it has no rf? You are clearly not measuring A LOT of what I said. You are measuring NONE of what I stated. You are just measuring the entire amp and that is it. You have no idea of what parts SOUND LIKE.
You have never tested parts for distortion because it is impossible and you and everyone knows that...
A lot of what you are saying here is false, for example the last two statements. We use Caddock resistors in our tube amps because they sound better, which you can see in their specs. Our tube amps are zero feedback and so have no correction; as a result we have to give them the best opportunity. Its funny how parts that measure well can sound good too.
The opening statement is false. The second statement is misleading. And yes, you test the finished product. That is how everyone including yourself does it, no matter how that testing is done; even if its just listening, which in the case of a class D is asking for trouble. If you mess up the radiation, you’re doing no-one any favors.
So I’m sure you do the testing and present your customers with a certificate showing that it still meets FCC part 15, right?