06-16-13: Csontos
However, there are A/B amps with no switching distortion and much quicker than lots of class A amps....
Csontos, such an amplifier is, then, not class-ABl it's a class-A amp with some very low off-state bias current. I believe this amp is in the fuzzy region of amplifier classification - what I mean is that, traditionally, pure class-A power amps have their rated output current running thru their output stage whether there is a music signal or not hence they get very (, very) hot just idling. And, traditionally, class-AB amps do not have any bias current running thru the output stage meaning that only one output transistor operates at any given time & the other is off as in totally shut-off. This is what gives the cross-over distortion.
If an amp is running some bias current so that the output transistors are always on but the bias current is (very) low then essentially the amp is biased into class-A. I think that they call these power amps 'sliding class-A power amps' meaning that they have some very low bias current during off-state & the bias increases proportional to the input music signal when it's present.
06-17-13: Phd
A watt is a watt unless you are comparing ss watts to tubes watts.
Phd, a watt is a watt is a watt, no matter what! what say?
that includes tube watts.
From Ralph's many posts on the 'voltage paradigm' vs. the 'power paradigm' I'm made to understand that ss amps output a constant voltage & modulate output current as the speaker impedance varies. Tube power amps, OTOH, output a constant power & modulate both voltage & current as the speaker load varies (while keeping the product of voltage times current = output power constant). So, you "feel" that tube watts go a longer way than ss watts.
But 1 watt is 1 watt & will always be so, whether tube or ss.