Debate: Class D amps need 48 hours of warmup


Have you listened to your amps cold? Warm? Both ways?  What was your experience? I’ll hold my own observations to not bias the replies. 

Did you leave them off while on vacation and then come back to find they sounded hard and strident? 

erik_squires

@armstrod  and @atmasphere Thanks for the feedback.

The staying cool part I think is a big deal!! 

I've not done a direct measurement of Hypex to ICEpower but I think ICEpower are cooler when idling, in general.  I may be wrong.  I wonder if that in some way delays their warm up time?  

@erik_squires Any class D amp will be cooler if idling. Our amp has to be pushed pretty hard and for a while before it seems like its any warmer. At home I play it all day and it stays cold to the touch. 

What little feedback we have regarding the on all the time thing suggests that it doesn't matter if the amp is playing a signal or idling. It only draws about 5 Watts at idle.

 

 

@atmasphere  - Of course.  I should have been clear. 

It's my impression that ICEpower amps, at idle, draw less power than Hypex amps, at idle, with similar rated amplifier power. 

I don’t notice much, if any difference when my class d amps are cold versus when they have been playing for a while versus when they have been on standby. Maybe if I listen hyper critically, but doesn’t seem worth the trouble. Now my class a single ended first watt amp definitely needs to warm up. No comparison between that and the class the amps

My experience has been, yes it makes a difference.  Id say at least 24+ hours with my Primare A60 class D amp.  I feel like it needs longer to sound good than my Pass Labs which is absolutely unexpected and I don't really understand why.  But it's not subtle.  Soundstage is more closed in and things sound less alive and real during warm-up if that makes sense. 

On my pass A30.2 it sounds really good right off the bat and only gets slightly better on warmup.  If bias were an issue, I'd think I'd hear more of a warm-up with the Class A? As that seems to be more commonly mentioned in audiophile circles.  Just a note there.  Just one person's anecdotal experience here.  I recommend using your own ears and system to determine this.  My amp is a purifi model I believe?  An older one but the implementation sounded way better than better measuring amps on my system to my ears