why do expensive amplifiers produce a better soundstage


i would like to know!

yamaho

As the owner of expensive amplifiers, both SS and tube, I challenge the premise of the question.  Amplifiers have little or no impact on sound stage in my experience.  Look to transducers (i.e. speakers, cartridges, if applicable), most importantly speaker placement (move them out from the back wall 2'-4'), add a couple of subs if at all possible. Room acoustics is always of paramount importance in every system.  These are the primary ingredients for good sound stage.  Very much secondary in importance until you get into very high, high end systems where they take on added significance would be your preamp and phono stage.  At this stage noise becomes a big focal point for improvement and it is here where grounding, wires and every detail becomes important.

Assuming good room acoustics and speaker setup and just focusing on the immediate question:
-Higher quality power supplies.

-Superior noise rejection.
-Better topologies to take advantage of and work in conjunction with the lower noise power supplies.

It is a complex relationship within the entire amplifier design from power socket to speaker terminals, but for sure a common factor is very low dynamic noise floor. If the microdetail is blocked by higher uncorrelated noise the sense of air and space (soundstage) is diminished accordingly. The very finest amps do not mask low level detail, but get out of the way of the upstream signal, which also should be on a similar performance level of the amp to get the most out of the system. 

I use a 2003 Yamaha RX-Z9 RECEIVER in "Pure Direct" mode through my Merman speakers and have not heard anything that has ever "soundstaged" and "imaged" as well as my system in my room..., and I’ve been to CES and T.H.E. Show.  This is just the two speakers (18"/10"/AMT), and there is no eq or room correction, either electronic or physical being used. 

The system brings the venue into the room rather than taking the room to the venue. And the equipment has the volume and headroom to bring ANY SIZE venue into the room.  Total investment is <$6K.

https://youtu.be/OmWNOi6b4ak

 

It seems to me that if an amplifier contributes to soundstage and imaging, it is through improved channel separation and crosstalk rejection.

here is the answer to your question 

 

it comes down to parts quality an expensive amplifier uses higher quality better tolerance parts if you use cheap resistors they may not be of the same level they are reported to be same with capacitors enough variation in the circuit leads to loss of signal