How far have ss amps really come in the last twenty years?


I have owned and enjoyed my Jeff Rowland model 8 ( recently modded and upgraded by Jeff to the last version) for many years. I recently had the opportunity of comparing it ( after mods) to a few of the current ss models from Gamut, D'Agostino, YBA, Parasound, Sim audio, CH precision, Constellation,PS audio,Pass Labs  and Musical Fidelity. The results were very interesting, because to my ears and in the systems that we did the comparison, the Rowland held its own against all but the most expensive D'Ag and CH amps. Even those were only very slightly outclassing the Rowland in the areas of top end resolution...and a tad in the bottom end resolution. Now the thing is that the last revision to the Rowland 8 was designed by Jeff over ten years ago! 
So, my question for those more technically inclined than myself is...how far has the design of ss amps come in the last ten...or even twenty years? 
128x128daveyf

"But is a modern resistor or capacitor really better sounding than what they used 50 years ago? Are modern amplifier circuits significantly different from the classic ones? To a basic amplifier circuit, all you can add is complexity, and that, in my opinion, is not necessarily a good thing."

Without a doubt; resistors, diodes and capacitors have improved in the last 50 years. Utilizing new parts will make a night and day difference with the same design.
@jdl57  If your Sound Labs have the original toroid backpanel, there's a tweak you can do that makes the speakers a lot easier (and better sounding) to drive! Alternatively you could get the new "Toroidal 2" backpanel that pretty much does the same thing.  If you really want to hear what ESLs do, traditionally since the Quads first appeared, ESLs and OTLs have been the way to do it. If your Sound Labs are so old that they have the original EI transformers for the high frequencies then they are already easy to drive, unless the bias controls are damaged which is very common with the older Sound Labs.
Hi,
sure ss amps have evolved mainly in efficiency, transparency, having better parts and construction (new materials). Design philosophy basically the same, music presentation different.
A 20 year old top amp then will still sound top today.
@atmasphere I just noticed your reply. I have the old style EI transformers and the back plates were sent to Sound Lab in the last few months where they were checked out by Dr. West himself. I had the panels rebuilt back in the '90s with what was the then new thinner mylar. I absolutely love the combination of the ML-2s and my Sound Lab A-2s.
@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.