Should Class A Amps be left on??


Ok- Audiogon members need some advice here. Should Solid State Class A Amps be powered all the time? Have heard two school of thoughts on this. Apparently from what I have heard this is a moot question for Class A/B amps due to the usual low biasing of A/B Amps. From what I have been to learn so far Class A Amps should be left continously on.
ferrari
We in California get our electricity from hamster power, and it is very expensive. :-)

Turn the Class A stuff off... It's not like we need heaters ;-)

KF
I keep my solid state amps on 24/7 unless I am going out of town. The soundstage really opens up after they have been on about an hour. I turn off my tube pre-amp between sessions. It seems to warm up fairly quickly, plus I don't want to burn up my NOS tube set.

If you notice a difference and don't want to wait then leave them on all the time. If you have heat/power concerns or ocassional listening habits, then you may want to switch them on in advance of your session.

Be aware that warm up can also be significant when auditioning new equipment.

On a side note, I have 22 Bryston amps at my work that have been on for 10 years straight without failure.

hope this helps,

Stewart
From a lifespan viewpoint, any heat is bad. Thermal cyclic failure is logrithmically dependant on power (half the power = 100 times more cycles before failure) so especially high power amps should not be turned on and off too often. But, if it is on all the time, the cycling effect is decreased because when you turn the volume up from idle, the device temp is not starting from room temp which increases your device lifespan compared to cold starts. The happy median point is very hard to find due to its dependancy on many factors like circuit design, layout, device type, bias, heatsink, size, weight, etc.

That said, some designs (like emitter-follower and low or zero feedback) can have thermal issues after being on for a long time like bias error which will degrade performance over time especially if extreme care in hotspot minimization was not taken. I would ask the manufacturer as to what to do (although they may be reluctant to tell you that they did not design for full thermal steady-state). If everything was taken into account in the amp design - there should be no problem in leaving it on all the time, save higher electric bill.

But as for me, I stay away from class A due to thermal problems (as I said - any heat is a problem) and because designers who like the concept of "pure" class A often tend to oversimplify the circuit to the extent that it cannot take care of itself in the long run or in extreme situations. I am always amazed how many high-priced amps have little to no protection circuits in the name of clean and pure sound, which I think is a very dumb idea. Arthur
I could be wrong about this but I thought that class A amps were least efficient when not driven. If I'm wrong I'm sure you good souls will correct me. If the first premise is true, I would think that leaving a class a amp on all the time would needlesly shorten the life of the amp, waste more electricity than any other component (perhaps as much or even more than the rest of the system combined) and have a negative effect on the enviornment. Perhaps a suitable compromise is in order.
I am an Aleph user and the class A operation on the 5 uses 300 watts, that's a lot of heat/electricity, when turned on regardless of whether there is program material.

The Aleph 5 seems to take 1 hour to warm up and become most musical and fluid, so I turn it on when I plan to listen and turn it off when not in use for longer than 6 hours. The heating and cooling cycles are no different than leaving it on continuously 24/7 I assume and quite likely better than frying forever.

As the Pass website says the aleph series like like the sun will burn brightly and when it is finished it is all over!

Enjoy...