The Future of Audio Amplification


I have recently paired an Audio Research DS225 Class D amplifier with an Audio Research tube preamplifier (SP8 mkii). I cannot believe how wonderful and lifelike my music sounds. The DS225 replaced an Audio Research SD135 Class AB amplifier. Perhaps the SD135 is just not as good as some of the better quality amps that are out there, but it got me thinking that amazingly wonderful sonance can be achieved with a tubed pre and Class D amp. I have a hunch that as more people experience this combination, it will likely catch on and become the future path of many, if not most audiophile systems. It is interesting that Audio Research has been at the forefront of this development.
distortions
People dissing Class D should really mention what Class D amps they have heard in what kind of setup and what they are comparing to. Blanket statements have no value.

BTW each of my Class D amps ($75, $2000, $6000 retail) sound very different much like one might find with 3 different amps of any type especially in diverse price categories so beware making blanket statements based on limited exposure and personal biases even perhaps.
Class D is definitely the future of audio. And they will only get better. Heat reeks havoc with amp internals. Class A is not immune to this not to mention draws large amounts of current even at idle.

I heard Linear Tube Audio preamp + Bel Canto Ref 600 recently, and together they sounded very good.

True audiophilia, on the other hand, involves a certain measure of necessary sufferint.  Class A without a/c in the summer; needed to hire moving people every time you rearrange your listening room, etc.

@aberyclark 

No, not really. The ONLY downside to class A amps is that they're obscenely inefficient and as a result make ungodly amounts of heat. Other than that they're technically superior in every way. 

Transistors make a lot of garbage when you go switching them fully off. That's why you apply a little bit of bias to a class AB amp. Otherwise it's just 2 class B amps with a ton of distortion. Class D doesn't bias the transistors at all and switches them at very high frequencies and that creates huge amounts of noise and distortion. The output of a class D module then needs to be filtered extensively to block the huge amount of high frequency noise and smooth the notchy sort of output into something resembling a waveform. 

The major advance in class D is stitching the transistors on and off even faster to achieve finer granularity in the pulsed output. That makes it easier to filter. Filtering isn't really advancing all that much. That technology has existed for a long time. It's just a debate of how to best apply it to this problem. 

I, and many others, think simple, linear signal chains from the source to the speaker sound best. It's really hard to beat a class A amp with a nice, clean, low level, low and even order distortion character. That's very hard to do with class D. 

Kosst so what Class D amp setups have you actually  heard?  What other  set ups are you comparing to?