SS amp mosfet 'haze' - ever experienced this?


Tried a new amp in my system on the weekend: the well-reviewed Gamut D200 mkIII (partly based on HP's great review), a single-mosfet SS design. At the dealers' place, it sounded great (speakers were Wilson Benesch Discovery, an isobarak, lower-efficiency design). I can't use a tube amp right now (unfortunately!) due to pending child and the system is on a LOT (2-ch/HT mix), so am looking for the most full-bodied SS amp I can find (prefer fully balanced design to match my modded SF Line 3 pre).

Well, to my surprise, the amp did NOT work out as well at my place. My speakers are 97db Coincident Total Victory. Yes, it was full-bodied, but I was definitely aware of this haze, or veiling around each note. I have a friend who designs amplifiers, and he said that this is inherent of mosfet designs. I called Israel (Coincident) and he was not surprised that I only heard this once I got back to my place, due to the high resolution abilities of my speaker vs the speakers at the dealer's. I guess I will be sticking with my Sim Audio W-3, as it is much 'cleaner' on my system (given that I must stay with SS). Too bad, 'cause my Sim W-3 definitely has the edge in clarity, but the Gamut was a touch more full-bodied.

Has anyone else experienced this 'haze' with a mosfet-based design? I admit, those with higher-efficiency speakers like mine (97db/14ohm) probably are NOT using higher-powered mosfet designs anyways, but I would like to know how others feel about mosfet designs and this issue I had.
sutts
That is what I thought. There are hidden gremlins. I thought the Pass amp was the last word in fidelity. People use my older posts against my evangelizing over the H2O. My defense is, you are only aware of what you know.
It would be interesting to hear from someone else who has heard the Gamut D200 MKIII on reasonably high efficiency speakers...
I use gamut d200 mk3 with sonus faber guarniere( 87 db), before I used audio research vt100 mk2, and the gamut is better, after 30 minutes of warming is better in all aspects.
What brands of solid-state power amplifiers and preamplifiers DO NOT use any MOSFETS at all in their signal paths?
Are there any brands that use bi-polars exclusively?