Expanding the Class D Conversation: How Would You Characterize Their Differences?


Expanding the Class D Conversation: How Would You Characterize Their Differences?

I'm currently trialing the NAD M23 (1st gen. Eigentakt-based), and I find it intriguing enough to want to understand it better — which means understanding the broader sonic landscape of class D. So I'm crowd-sourcing.

In a recent exchange, the estimable Ralph Karsten (Atma-Sphere Music Systems) made two comments that stopped me cold. For those who missed it, here's what he said:

"IME, class D amps vary in sound more than tube amps, which is to say, quite a lot."

"IMO there is a bigger difference between various class D amps than you hear between various tube amps. IOW just because you heard one class D amp says nothing about how the next one might sound."

Link: https://forum.audiogon.com/posts/2885828

As I think through this more carefully, these are genuinely important claims. My own experience with tube amps confirms that they produce audibly distinct characters across topologies and designs. If Ralph is right and class D exceeds that range, then generalizing from one class D experience to another is even more hazardous than I assumed.

One specific question for Audiogon members:

If you have a Class D amp or have compared class D amplifiers, how would you describe their character(s)?

Here are some criteria I use:

  1. Frequency balance — Is the tonal response even across bass, mids, and treble, or does it favor certain regions?
  2. High-frequency texture — Are the highs extended and smooth, or edgy, grainy, and fatiguing?
  3. Bass definition — Is the low end tight and articulate, or loose and bloated?
  4. Midrange character — Does the midrange feel present and natural, or recessed and thin?
  5. Transient speed — Does the amp respond quickly to dynamic attacks, or does it sound sluggish and rounded?
  6. Dynamic range — Does it scale convincingly from quiet passages to loud ones, or compress the difference?
  7. Soundstage width and depth — Does it create a convincing three-dimensional image, or sound flat and narrow?
  8. Image specificity — Are instruments and voices placed precisely, or do they blur and wander?
  9. Background noise floor — Is the silence between notes actually silent, or is there grain, haze, or hash?
  10. Long-term listenability — After an extended session, do you want to keep listening, or has something been quietly fatiguing you?

If you can include relevant system context — room, speakers, preamp — please do. Those variables will help me interpret what the amp itself is contributing.

I'm less interested in rankings than in understanding what Ralph mentioned, namely the [vast] range of sonic signatures class D is capable of. Eigentakt, Hypex, Pascal, Purifi, GaN-based, etc. — all fair game.

Price is no constraint here — I'm interested in the full range of what's out there.

hilde45

The problem with more efficient  speakers is they tend to also be bigger and heavier ie not practical for most. 
 

Some like Fritz are designed to be easier to drive yet not necessarily efficient. 

I’ve found good quality Class D amps help me out a lot by being very efficient at driving a broader variety of speakers well.

 

@markmuse wrote:

Ralph has always been straight with us.

Absolutely, and I always enjoy his contributions even in those times when we don’t share the same point of view.

My comment wasn’t directed at him, but rather at the speakers-my amps-can’t-drive-shouldn’t-exist crowd.

I firmly believe that if there is a single hifi component that should be chosen strictly on the basis of their end sound, it is the speakers. And if it just so happens that your choice likes to wallow in one-ohm territory, the correct response is to buy amps that are comfortable driving one-ohm loads.

Hope this clarifies things a bit 😃

 

Many higher sensitivity speakers are larger, but there are approaches such as with Fritz (simplified crossover) and Zu, Pearl, or  Omega (single driver) that are small/normal and easy to drive. There’s also horn (Klipsch, Volti, Charney), and open baffle (Spatial).

Horn loading is the most powerful efficiency mechanism because the horn acts as an acoustic transformer, matching the high mechanical impedance of the driver cone to the low impedance of open air.  Single drivers avoid crossover networks, which are intrinsically lossy. The tradeoff is that one driver must be engineered to handle a very wide bandwidth.

If one decides early on that subs will handle a lot of bass, you can have efficiency and multi-driver design. But then the blend between main speakers and subs needs to be very artfully done – multiple subs, likely, and DSP. 

My two cents.