Is there actually a difference?


Speakers sound different - that is very obvious. But I’ve never experienced a drastic change between amps. Disclaimer that I’ve never personally ABX tested any extremely high end gear.

With all these articles claiming every other budget amp is a "giant killer", I’ve been wondering if there has ever been blind tests done with amplifiers to see if human ears can consistently tell the difference. You can swear to yourself that they do sound different, but the mind is a powerful thing, and you can never be sure unless it’s a truly blind test.

One step further - even IF we actually can tell the difference and we can distinguish a certain amp 7/10 times under extreme scrutiny, is it really worth the thousands you are shelling out to get that nearly-imperceivable .01% increase in performance?

Not looking to stir up any heated debate. I’ve been in audio for several years now and have always thought about this.
asianatorizzle
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Correct. SS Amps designed to high specification test measurements should sound almost the same. Tube amps can be of all kinds of flavour and sound very different.
Depends on the speaker. :) 

Reasonably good amplifiers driving a very neutral load should sound the same, except for distortion, which amps like Pass deliberately add. I listened to some very good solid state, linear amps and Class D and could not tell them apart with my speakers, so I sold the linear amps. :)

Some speakers are said to be "discerning" of amplifiers, which really means they are hard to drive and more likely to show up audible differences between amps with different output impedances. 

For extreme examples of this, see the frequency response charts for tube amps on Stereophile. Yes, we're talking SS but that will illustrate output impedance issues well.

Best,

Erik
There are no giant killers in audio, only good values and products that don't perform at their value. 

Synergy and bottlenecks are the name of the game. Creating one and eliminating the other can make your system revealing of differences or completely void of them. 

This could be a very interesting tread, looking forward to follow it.

One thing I feel doesn’t get enough discussion is high end solid state amps for normal 2way speakers or just speakers that are easy to drive, not talking about horns and the like, often when I see discussion about high end amps ( and there is a big tread on this forum) it always is high wattage amps driving difficult to low impedance full range speakers! 

Maybe members on this forum are mostly US based, therefore having larger living rooms or space for their equipment, so large speakers are more appealing giving the full sound one needs, or could it be the US members liking more umph in the lower register;-) be as it may, in most countries around the world I think that a big percentage of music lovers have much smaller rooms where good quality (smaller) amps and speakers are more suitable.

Would say a 100w to 150w high end intergrated amp sound much different between each other ? ( excluding Class A )

And could you not get a better (high end ) sound much cheaper than many of these high end rigs we see, often in rooms that are far too small to make them justice?

Just something I think about sometimes:-) 

A disclaimer, I have nothing against people spending big money on nice big systems, have heard two that sounded fantastic, although most I find sound way to cold and clinical, often loosing the essence in the music, making me want to leave the room after a few songs.

I also often find that smaller amps sound better at low volume than high wattage amps, do others have that experience too? Would a 8 ohm speaker going down to 6 ohm need more than say 150w ?


Partly depends on the interaction of the amp and the loudspeaker connected, and their electrical characteristics.  A given amp can sound bad on one speaker and much better on another.  But yes, agree with @shadorne, not a huge difference between competent SS designs, despite the supposed chasms that audio reviewers like to dwell on and rhapsodize about.  But I certainly noticed a difference between my 300B, single-ended, class A Cary and a significantly higher-powered SS.  Swings and roundabouts.
Good thread started here, OP. FWIW I think it depends on what you consider "drastic". I can tell differences between my NAD, Denon, NuForce, Krell and Vincent amps. Differences of about 10%, maybe 20% with regards to sound quality. Just my 2c, YMMV.

Tom
twoleftears
... not a huge difference between competent SS designs, despite the supposed chasms that audio reviewers like to dwell on and rhapsodize about ...
The problem with opaque criticism such as this is that labeling something a "huge difference" or "not a huge difference" is completely subjective. The same happens when others observe the diminishing returns that happen as price increases. Those relatively small, incremental improvements are very important to some, and not at all important to others. The OP asks "is it really worth the thousands you are shelling out" for those improvements. The answer is for every audiophile to decide for himself.
There are no giant killers in audio, only good values and products that don't perform at their value.

Synergy and bottlenecks are the name of the game. Creating one and eliminating the other can make your system revealing of differences or completely void of them.

Very well said, @audiothesis  

I will add that some do, and will, look a giant in the eyes. : )
 Lots of good answers above. Yes many big dollar amps are more about hefty power supplies so they can drive difficult loads, as was said previously. My own approach is that if a speaker is a difficult load I don't want it.  Money believe is multi way difficult to drive speakers use a tiny bit of fine detail.  Speaking purely  of dynamic cone speakers. Panel speakers are another story, I can understand why they are difficult loads. 
And as well as alluded to above, the best sounding amps are lower powered simple amps, often times tube based. 
 That being said, I love running a big solid-state amp into a pair of subs for anything below 50 Hz. Off of a separate Output on the preamp. 
 But Audio is highly subjective and I'll never fault anyone for a different path to their own happiness. Just don't buy into all the nonsense that's floating around. 
"Speakers sound different - that is very obvious. But I’ve never experienced a drastic change between amps. Disclaimer that I’ve
never personally ABX tested any extremely high end gear."

In general, on an absolute basis it's easier to hear differences in speakers because their design physically couples and interacts with the room.  Differences in amps can be more subtle but still crucial, and they can also vary by system.  In my system for example, my speakers are relatively efficient and I tend to hear much less difference between amps than preamps.  With more demanding speakers I think differences between amps can become more apparent and meaningful.  But even in my system, subtle differences in amps can be extremely important at a certain level.  "At a certain level" is the critical point here, and this gets to my next point. 

"One step further - even IF we actually can tell the difference and we can distinguish a certain amp 7/10 times under extreme scrutiny, is it really worth the thousands you are shelling out to get that nearly-imperceivable .01% increase in performance?"

First, it's impossible to quantify differences between two components, so let's just call them small perceived differences on an absolute level.  Once you become familiar with truly reference quality sound reproduction and your own personal tastes in what moves you sonically, these "small" perceived differences can literally make all the difference.  The difference between a system that objectively sounds really really good and one that drops your jaw to the ground and/or has the ability to reduce you to tears with the right music could easily be a matter of changing from one amplifier to another.  Given that level of impact, how much extra would YOU pay for that amplifier?  As I said before, "at a certain level" (and level applies as much to the audiophile as it does the system) relatively small absolute perceived differences between amplifiers can ultimately be huge in the context of a good system.  By the way, this doesn't apply to only megabuck systems -- it also very much holds for high-quality affordable systems. 

I'll end with this -- "at a certain level" absolutely EVERYTHING in a system (and the room it's in) matters and can become crucial. 
SS amplification (pre and power) reached such a high level of development over the past three decades that competing units are functionally and sonically equivalent. 
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I agree with others who have said "it depends on the speaker".

In my travels, I stopped at a dealer and auditioned a Magico floor standing speaker at first driven by a solid state power amp with a very high damping factor; it seemed in that setup the Magicos needed to be driven pretty hard to "come to life".  When the other sound room became available, the salesman moved the Magicos and played them with a powerful tube amp and to me, they sounded significantly more "musical", had better bass and didn't sound so "in your face".

As I've moved up the line with my equipment, it seems that it's the "synergy" of all the components in the chain that seems most important.
+1 @ejr on synergy. 

"SS amplification (pre and power) reached such a high level of development over the past three decades that competing units are functionally and sonically equivalent."

Well that’s just plain silly.

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I’ve tested several and I couldn’t tell any difference and I was trying
to hear a difference.. I did testing between Krell and Red Dragon mono amps and couldn’t tell the difference between them either other than the Dragons had better bass slam. Same thing with DAC’S, the difference was negligible between a $1k DAC and $4k one.
Read Pass' own writing on the subject of amps and distortion. He makes it pretty clear. 

BTW, I'm not saying this is a negative thing. You should buy what pleases your ear and if Pass pleases your ear, buy it. 

Best,

E
I am 100% confident I could tell the difference 10/10 times between the Schiit Vidar that I tried and the Levinson 333 I bought and that is my “forever-amplifier.”  My Nautilus 801’s are known to be very hard to drive.  I wish I had another 333 to play with for a few weeks to try bi-amping, but I’m happy how it is.
I can tell the difference between ss and tube immediately. I feel the best ss amps try to replicate the tube sound with more bass slam. The class A ss amps do this very well. Love class A ss and tube amps. 
The only high power SS amps I have owned was a Krell and a Pass Labs. Heck at one time I A/B'd a Pass Labs X350.5 against the Pass Labs X350.8 and in all instances it was quite easy to notice the differences.

In tube amps I had a Atma-sphere M-60 3.3 and now I own the new Carver Raven 350. They sound more similar to each other than the solid states did.

ozzy
"...is it really worth the thousands you are shelling out to get that nearly-imperceivable .01% increase in performance?"
Only a person paying for it can answer that question. Some people drive Toyota Corolla, others prefer Lamborghini. Some of those with Lamborghini are fine with a Bluetooth speaker, while some with Toyota have more expensive audio equipment. It depends what you value at the moment of purchase and how much.
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Maybe it is just in my setup but I am certain I can hear a difference in solid state amps. Auditioned several amplifiers with my Tannoy XT8 speakers along the way.

Started with a Creek 50A - warm and very pleasant but not much energy. Moved to a Naim XS and definitely got a more solid presentation top to bottom. Then the eye wanders and I try the big Peachtree class D and the PS Audio 700 Monoblocks. Neither myself nor my wife could really every enjoy either class D. Dry and thin were the words we came up with independently. Strong dynamics but no joy. Could be the Tannoy sensitivity just not playing ball as plenty of reviewers like them enough.

Now I run a Hegel 160 though the week and a Primaluna Dialogue Premium Integrated on the weekend and any days I can just sit and listen. The Hegel has a great sound for a SS but the Primaluna is just so very nice. Might try me Sugden, Class A Luxman or First Watt next for a little bit of that SS warmth folks talk about.
"SS amplification (pre and power) reached such a high level of development over the past three decades that competing units are functionally and sonically equivalent. "

This is simply NOT true. If you have decent ears, you can tell the difference between a $1000.00 and a $5,000.00 SS amp. I had an Anthem A5 which has roughly 225 WPC into 5 channels. It has one power supply on board. It sounded light years better than the Integra 5 channel, 125 WPC, it replaced. Now I have an Anthem P5 which has a whopping 325 WPC into 5 channels, each channel has it's own PS, and I can definitely hear another HUGE step up in SQ. The difference is headroom. With lower, lesser quality amps you have much less than with higher end units. There is a reason they cost more, the quality of components and engineering invested.
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The challenge with tests is that the testers are in an unfamiliar room, with unfamiliar gear, and unfamiliar music. It's overwhelming and in these conditions SPEAKERS can be difficult to discern. 

Slip a new amp into my system, in my room, and with my music and I'm going to notice the change.  
I am firmly in the "Yes, they can sound very different camp." In the past, I have switched out similar mid-fi amps on lower resolution systems and heard no discernable difference, but since I have had better systems, any amp that I use now sounds distinctly different. The differences are easy to hear, simple as that.
Every type of capacitor, every brand of resistor, transistors, tubes, all sound different.

Add circuit topology, and, while there may be similarities, no two amps will sound identical - that is, with practice and attention.

I change one thing at a time in my DIY Class A SS; sometimes it takes a day or two to educate the ear, but most changes are audible. For example, as an experiment, I used different brands and types of resistors in a high quality rotary switch as the gain resistor. The differences were obvious, the choices clear - and the most expensive resistor made the poorest sound.
System synergy is most important. There are big differences in sound between a good tube amp and a SS amp. I also disagree that all good SS amps sound the same. IMO, there are a lot of SS companies that have a HOUSE. For example, classe and McIntosh have warmer sounding amps where there are companies that have more cooler sounding amps.
Those who can't tell the audible differences among amplifers are lucky and with more money in their pockets but should get their ears checked.
There are plenty, but the most famous one is the Stereo Review one from 1987(?). I've been in a couple. No one did better than a coin flip.
Perhaps cultivate a group of friends with better hearing. 🤗 Fortunately audio tests don’t mean anything.

Any yutz with ears can hear the difference between an amplifier before and after vibration isolation. Well, maybe not the bullet headed dude from Audio Review.
Check these guys out. Follow link and click on blind tests. They A/B tested 2 systems with only the speakers (ATC SCM 12) and speaker cables in common.

System 1
Classe
YBA
Wadia

System 2
Sony
Behringer

Further more, the the cheap system used really cheap “RadioShack” quality interconnects and was set up on a rickety, wooden chair.

http://matrixhifi.com/ENG_marco.htm
Interesting results from that test. My wife and I have four different systems in our house, and we certainly don't agree on what sounds "better". When I have a friend over to listen to the main system, more often than not there is disagreement over which sounds better, and for what reasons. People do hear things, and listen for things, differently.
I have two SS amps in my system that I swap back and forth. Perhaps not a fair comparison but one is a Threshold S200 I use for serious music listening and the other is a Parasound Zamp V3 which is used for casual listening and tv. The Zamp is very well reviewed and is considered to punch way above it's pay grade. That said...the Threshold destroys it in every category and I'm sure I could pick it out 100% of the time in a blind test. 

I recently picked up a set of Acoustic Zen Hologram II speaker cables and I can hear a very nice improvement while connected to the Threshold. I cannot hear any difference while connected to the Parasound. 

Like I said probably not a fair comparison, swap the Zamp out with JC1s or JC5s and I'm sure the differences wouldn't be so stark. My point is of course there are differences, class A alone puts a SS amp in another category. I want to try a tube amp next :)
Back  when I was young many years ago I could here all sorts of differences between amps. In the pre-nineties days the big amps often didn’t sound near as good as the low wattage four output transistor 60 watt class!
In those times interstate coupling caps were common and caused degradation. Around 2K many companies had adopted direct coupled designs with dc servos on the outputs. All at once amps sounded much cleaner, even the big amps were much improved. (Yes I know I’m oversimplifying!)
In recent years I found out about level matching amplifiers (within .003 volts) from Van Alstine. (Wish I’d known sooner.) Using his methodology, most modern amplifiers I’ve compared sound very similar in the mid frequencies. I think due variances in output impedance and how an amp interacts with a speaker’s modulus of impedance there are audible differences mainly in the frequency extremes.
 I think those who hear dramatic differences in amp sound are using a speaker with a difficult load. I’m not surprised when Alan Shaw has no winners of the Harbeth Challenge. Those speakers are such an easy load. I suspect any reasonably good modern amplifier would sound almost identical! Good discussion.
This specific subject has been discussed and debated here, and everywhere. I know my systems, I know my music, and I trust my ears. Taking 1 piece out and replacing it with another piece, whether it is an amplifier, or an interconnect, I hear differences. Determining which I prefer, that is for another discussion, but differences, are easily audible. Enjoy ! MrD.
tomfoolery,
Very interesting info, I'm not familiar with level matching....will have to look into that. And this is a great discussion for me as it's primarily what I'm concentrating my efforts on now. Here's been my experiences...just my two pennies.
  1. The very best system I've heard had a tube amp. Not going to argue the merits/faults of tubes but it just sounded incredibly musical and captivating to me. 
  2. The next best systems I've heard had class A amps. They seemed to come close to the sound of tube amps.
  3. A/B amps of various brands and quality seem like they can get closer to a class A amp. 
  4. Class D I have no hands on experience with other than what I've read. 
So my "unicorn" system would have the efficiency of Class D, would sound like a tube amp, but would also be able to be switched to sound like A/AB for home theatre and some types of music. Impossible I know, just wanted to expand on the OP's question of differences and hear other's thoughts on the above "class warfare" lol. 
There is a difference. Most systems benefit from having an amplifier that has characteristics that optimize the sound of the speakers (in your room, playing the music you listen to, at volumes you are comfortable with).

Your listening habits, room and speakers will make much more difference, provided you are using a well specified amp that can produce the appropriate amount of power. The quality of your program material will also make a huge difference.
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"Any yutz with ears can hear the difference between an amplifier before and after vibration isolation. Well, maybe not the bullet headed dude from Audio Review."

Do you mean Julian Hirsch from Stereo Review?

Kinda unrelated to this discussion but how much of a difference is there between a very early Levinson (ML3,ML9) and a current one or similar brand? I've always wanted to know.
I recently bought  a used Krell 300i integrated on a whim. It proceeded to wipe the floor with some amps that cost many times more.  Many amps do sound similar but wide deviations  exst too .  Which is right depends on your taste and system synergy. 

Per Peter Aczel, of The Audio Critic:  “Longtime readers of The Audio Critic know the drill that comes at this point: I repeat, for the nth time, that all amplifiers having high input impedance, low output impedance, flat frequency response, low distortion, and low noise floor sound exactly the same when operated at matched levels and not clipped. (Those who are unable to stomach this simple truth, proved over and over again in double-blind listening tests, should stick with Stereophile.)”


Proved over and over in double blind tests? Then I guess it must be true.

Question: Why did they have to do the blind tests over and over again? Weren’t they convinced by the first test? 😳