We have an internal design rule we call the 20-year rule that prevents us from using NOS tube types, IOW the tube type has to be in current manufacture. We've had this from the beginning, so its already served us well, as we have an aggressive update program for our older products.
Its a simple fact that semiconductors go obsolete and out of production at light speed relative to tubes. You can still buy new manufactured tubes that were designed 60 years ago, but I can think of quite a few semiconductors designed in the last 10 years that are already long gone.
The 'dwindling tube stock' idea is a red herring, unless a manufacturer has chosen to design around a tube that is no longer made, a foolhardy undertaking.
As a lot of the current class D amps are on monolithic modules using proprietary semiconductors, you can expect that if you need to service the amplifier in 10 years or the like that the device is going to be tricky to find. This is one sure way of knowing that the technology is still on its way up.
To get a better understanding of this, an example of a mature semiconductor technology is the lowly op-amp. You can still buy TLO82s brand new, despite their having been designed in the 1970s.
How many people on this thread think that they will have the same class D amplifier ten years from now- knowing full well that in far less time than that their amp will be superseded?
Its a simple fact that semiconductors go obsolete and out of production at light speed relative to tubes. You can still buy new manufactured tubes that were designed 60 years ago, but I can think of quite a few semiconductors designed in the last 10 years that are already long gone.
The 'dwindling tube stock' idea is a red herring, unless a manufacturer has chosen to design around a tube that is no longer made, a foolhardy undertaking.
As a lot of the current class D amps are on monolithic modules using proprietary semiconductors, you can expect that if you need to service the amplifier in 10 years or the like that the device is going to be tricky to find. This is one sure way of knowing that the technology is still on its way up.
To get a better understanding of this, an example of a mature semiconductor technology is the lowly op-amp. You can still buy TLO82s brand new, despite their having been designed in the 1970s.
How many people on this thread think that they will have the same class D amplifier ten years from now- knowing full well that in far less time than that their amp will be superseded?