Why do amps sound different?


Hi folks, can anyone tell me why amps sound different? I know this is a very trivial question, but it isn't so trivial as I previously thought. For example: an amp can sound "warm", while the other can sound "lean" and a bit "cooler". These amps measure the same on the test bench, but why do they sound different? What causes the "warm" characteristic if the amp has pretty good measurements and frequency characteristics? It is certainly not measurable high frequency roll off, otherwise the amp sucks. Maybe one of the experts among us can elucidate this issue a bit. Thank you.

Chris
dazzdax
A very likely reason two amps can sound different, yet measure similarly on the test bench, is that the measurements typically taken are not done under the real load an amplifier will encounter with a dynamic waveform. Secondly, I'm not sure the typical bench measurements are measuring the right things regarding how an amplifier will sound. For a simple example, what if THD is basically the same, but the distribution of even and odd harmonic distortion is different among the various amps. Or what if various parameters, alone perhaps not significant, combine in ways that alter our brain's interpretation of the sound?

I think it's a not so simple a question you've asked. In my opinion, the best amplifier manufacturers have a basic measurement model they've developed/trust that allows them to accept or reject a given design before putting much additional time and effort in developing it. I would also guess that any manufacturer that claims to develop a design soley from ear, beginning to end, is probably not being truthful, spent a lifetime getting one design "right", or will not have much consistency in future designs. My point is that an audio system is a complex system, much like the weather. We can know quite a bit about the "averages", but it takes a very complex model, with alot of measured inputs, to have a reasonable chance of predicting the weather with any degree of accuracy.