@cundare2 If you don't mind some correction, the 3rd harmonic isn't 'nasty'. Musically its an octave and a 5th above the fundamental tone. Its well-known that it is innocuous such that this fact is often only mentioned in passing in engineering tomes like this one (see page 10).
The primary distortion that a properly working reel to reel (or any other analog tape recorder) makes is the 3rd harmonic. I don't hear people complaining about reel to reel sound, can we put this one to bed?
The 3rd harmonic is present in any amplifier. It is useful in tube amps for masking higher ordered harmonics and is a big reason for tube amps sounding smooth as a result. It tends to be more suppressed in solid state designs so the high orders in solid state tend to be unmasked, especially if distortion rises with frequency, which is quite common.
The period of amplifiers with TIM issues was about 10-15 years earlier than you suggest. Marshall Leach designed his rather famous amplifier in the 1970s to get around this problem. However its helpful to understand that TIM by itself isn't a thing- tunes out is was just distortion caused by how the feedback is received in the amplifier design. Its caused by the input differential voltage amplifier having to drive a high capacitance, and you can get situations where the feedback is unable to control the voltage amplifier, resulting in distortion. The problem was solved by degenerating the gain of the input differential amplifier, thus reducing the compensation capacitance it had to drive.
We use a lot of feedback in our class D (as its a self-oscillating design) but the feedback is able to control the amplifier properly with any signal right up to clipping. So its immune to this problem.
IMO your 2nd paragraph in the post above doesn't make sense. You do have to be precise when talking to lawyers and engineers :)
The 'supersonic, low-amplitude line noise' to which you refer really isn't a thing! When designing a class D amplifier, its not enough to build it to meet FCC subpart 15 or EU radiation directives; you have to make it considerably more quiet than that so noise doesn't interfere with digital audio devices connected to the amp. So quite literally the noise you mentioned doesn't exist in a successful design. In our case the class D is quieter than most tube amps, not just in the speaker but also radiated noise (if the tube amp uses a solid state power supply). So this does mean less radiated noise than most solid state class A or AB amps.
FWIW, due to the fact that GaNFETs have no leads at all, they tend to have very low parasitic inductances, so its easier to control switching noise. This is important because GaNFETs can switch at some pretty high speeds; perhaps a couple of orders magnitude higher than the actual switching frequency of the amp itself. So you have to make sure everything is cleanly done, otherwise you may well have the outputs switching at 60MHz and heating up a bit as a result :)