Class A vs. Class AB vs. Class D — how they work and where they fit
An amplifier's "class" describes how its output transistors behave over each cycle of the audio signal — specifically, how much of the waveform each device is actively amplifying. That single choice cascades into efficiency, heat, weight, cost, and (arguably) sound character.
The purist's choice
Output devices conduct through the entire 360° of the signal cycle. Transistors are always on, always drawing current — even at idle.
The practical sweet spot
Two output devices each handle slightly more than half the cycle, with a small bias current keeping them both active through the crossover region. Class A behavior at low levels, Class B at high levels.
The modern powerhouse
Switch-mode operation. Output transistors are either fully on or fully off at very high frequencies (hundreds of kHz to MHz), using pulse-width modulation. A low-pass filter at the output reconstructs the analog signal.
| Attribute | Class A | Class AB | Class D |
|---|---|---|---|
| Conduction angle | 360° | 180–360° | Switching (on/off) |
| Efficiency | 15–30% | 50–70% | 85–95% |
| Heat generated | Very high | Moderate | Low |
| Size / weight | Large, heavy | Medium | Small, light |
| Distortion (modern designs) | Very low | Low | Low to very low |
| Cost per watt | High | Moderate | Low |
| Typical power range | 5–50 W | 20–500 W | 20–2000+ W |
| Common uses | Audiophile hi-fi, studio reference | Hi-fi, pro audio, guitar amps | Car audio, powered speakers, subs, PA, modern hi-fi |
None of these is universally "best" — the right pick depends on the room, the speakers, the budget, and what you value.