A quick internet search shows that the following amps did not, or could not pass the Stereophile administered 1/3 power test: Bryston 14BB-SST, Arcam Alpha 10P, McIntosh Mc1201 and Pass X1000. I can only imagine that a thorough search would turn up many more examples.
Not passing this test doesn't mean an amplifier is bad. It could mean underspecified heat sinking, very high bias settings or very conservatively set protection circuitry. In the case of the D'Agostino I suspect the copper heat things are an attempt to keep the amps weight manageable. Remember, the 1/3 power test does not reflect real world operating conditions. It's designed to stress a solid state amplifier in order to then measure distortion components.
Rhljazz, what exactly is your agenda in starting this thread? Nowhere in the Stereophile article does it say anything about a melt down. The amp stopped working. It didn't melt, catch fire or explode, yet you keep using language suggesting some Chernobyl style event. You actually seem to take pleasure in the amp's malfunction. The German language has a multisyllabic word for what you're exhibiting.
Not passing this test doesn't mean an amplifier is bad. It could mean underspecified heat sinking, very high bias settings or very conservatively set protection circuitry. In the case of the D'Agostino I suspect the copper heat things are an attempt to keep the amps weight manageable. Remember, the 1/3 power test does not reflect real world operating conditions. It's designed to stress a solid state amplifier in order to then measure distortion components.
Rhljazz, what exactly is your agenda in starting this thread? Nowhere in the Stereophile article does it say anything about a melt down. The amp stopped working. It didn't melt, catch fire or explode, yet you keep using language suggesting some Chernobyl style event. You actually seem to take pleasure in the amp's malfunction. The German language has a multisyllabic word for what you're exhibiting.