@daveyf "Nonetheless, aside from Class D ( which I also feel was, and continues to be, a step backwards ( except for the lower weight and heat issuance) ) it seems there really hasn’t been any true advances in the ss amp realm."
Comments like this are why Audiogon is slipping into irrelevance - for me at least. Too high of a nonsense/substance ratio.
Class D is one answer to the question you posed at the beginning of this thread. There are phenomenal implementations of this technology, and I will assert that they challenge everything that is upstream of them to be much better, from the recording process to playback. If you have problems with good class D implementations, something else is amiss, and you are unaware of it because you have "synergistically" created a sound that YOU like. When you replace your amp with a much more transparent class d amplifier - one with very little distortion, one which is able to easily control the impedance vicissitudes of your speakers, and one with plenty of clean power, you are hearing all of the upstream problems. Don't blame good class D. If you like your euphonic concoction, rock on. You are simply playing a balancing game of complementary distortions (I may have hit on one significant aspect of what much of audiophile activity centers around in that last sentence.) Been there, done that, am getting sick of it.
Transparent amplifiers (and there are others besides the usual class D suspects) will require a change to you audiophile aesthetic, and that is not something that, apparently many audiophiles can open up to. But if you can get into it, you will have some interesting terrain to explore.