Looking for a 7 channel power amp to replace Krell showcase 7


I am using Krell showcase 7 now with good result in my HT. But the amp is like a grill during summer, it heats up my basement. There is also some reliability concern about this amp. I am looking for some 7 channel amp that is comparable to Krell to replace my showcase 7, which will not generate that much heat. I am using Krell S-1000 processor in HT setup with B&W 805 speakers. Balance input is preferred but not must. No fan in power amp please.
cygnus_859

Class D amps can be engineered to be a perfect circuit. However, you must include the speaker impedance itself as part of the circuit. A Class D amp can provide perfect frequency response if the speaker is a very constant impedance (i.e. like a straight 8 ohm resister). However, a real speaker is almost never a perfect resistor and its impedance curve is typically all over the place (such as ranging from 3 ohms to 16+ ohms in different frequency areas). Some speakers are harder to drive with a Class D amp. In these cases, the speaker itself tends to drive the frequency response of the Class D amplifier and you get things such as tube-like midrange, weak bass/sub-bass, less punch/slam, high frequencies rolled off. A regular Class AB amp will still be affected by the speaker impedance curve, but not nearly as much (this is a significant difference). I played with Class D amps for a while until I figured all this out.

Sure, the Class D amps will run very low heat and are very efficient (and they are very small), but if you have hard to drive speakers, a normal Class AB will always be superior. I had some Focal speakers that are very easy to drive and they worked well with Class D. However, when I moved to B&W 805 Diamonds, they just did not do as well. An Emotiva XPA-1 monoblock just stomped all over the Channel Island Class D. (yes, I do understand that the Emotiva is a much heftier amp, but still high-current Class AB).

I’m not sure what advances have been made in Class D over the years, but I would really keep this in mind if you want to research and try Class D. In my opinion, the B&W 805s that you have can really sing, but they really need a high-current Class AB amp (which does heat up in any amp you choose). If you do choose Class D, I would suggest you mate it with a speaker that has an almost constant impedance curve.

The Krell Chorus 7200 is the natural choice. The fans are extremely quiet and extraordinary sound. They got it right on these amps except for cosmetic design which looks fine in person and a matter of personal preference. I'm plenty happy with my Chorus 5200. 

Thank you Auxinput, nice to learn that impedance impact on Class-D amp. It seems very important to B&W805 because of impendence bump.