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Ningbo Zhenhai Huage Electronics Co., Ltd.

We are a professional audio enterprise integrating research and development, production, and sales. is a

mixer power amplifier manufacturers and class AB amplifier module suppliers

. For many years, we focus on the production of sound mixers, active power amplifiers, microphones, and related electronic components, equipment, and other products.
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  • Mar,2026 26
    Industry News
    Why Choose a Class AB Amplifier for Loudspeakers?

    The direct reason: A Class AB loudspeaker amplifier gives you the best practical trade-off between audio fidelity and real-world efficiency. It eliminates the crossover distortion of Class B designs, delivers THD figures below 0.1% that rival Class A, yet operates at 50–75% efficiency — roughly double what Class A achieves. That combination of clean sound, manageable heat, and reliable long-term operation is why Class AB is the dominant topology across professional live sound, studio monitoring, installed AV, and high-performance consumer audio worldwide. The Core Problem Class AB Solves in Amplifier Design Every amplifier designer faces the same fundamental trade-off: achieving low distortion requires transistors to remain in their linear operating region throughout the audio waveform — but keeping transistors active continuously wastes large amounts of power as heat. The three major topologies each take a different position on that trade-off. Class A solves the distortion problem completely by keeping both output transistors conducting at all times, but pays an enormous efficiency penalty: even with no audio signal, a Class A amplifier draws full current from its supply and dissipates all of it as heat. Efficiency rarely exceeds 25 to 35%, meaning a 100W Class A amplifier may require a 300 to 400W power supply and produce enough waste heat to require a heatsink the size of a radiator. Class B tries to solve the efficiency problem by switching each transistor on only for its half of the waveform — positive half to one device, negative half to the other. Efficiency rises to 60–70%, but the moment one device hands off to the other at the zero-crossing point, there is a brief discontinuity — crossover distortion — that is audible and particularly objectionable in music reproduction at moderate listening levels where it represents a measurable percentage of the total signal energy. Class AB resolves both: a small forward bias current keeps both transistors just barely conducting across the crossover region, so the handoff is smooth and continuous. Crossover distortion disappears from the measured and audible output, and efficiency recovers to the 50–75% range typical of well-designed Class AB circuits under normal music program levels. Distortion Performance: Why Class AB Achieves Audiophile-Grade Clarity The most critical audio performance metric for a loudspeaker amplifier is Total Harmonic Distortion plus Noise (THD+N) — the ratio of distortion and noise components to the desired output signal. A Class AB loudspeaker amplifier with well-designed bias circuitry and global negative feedback typically achieves THD+N figures of 0.002% to 0.1% across its rated power range. To put this in perceptual context: psychoacoustic research places the threshold for audible harmonic distortion in musical program material at approximately 0.3 to 1% for trained listeners under controlled conditions. At 0.01% or below, the distortion introduced by a Class AB amplifier is not merely inaudible — it is buried at least 30 dB below any realistic human detection threshold. This means the loudspeaker itself, the room acoustics, and the recording chain will all introduce more audible coloration than the amplifier. THD+N Performance Comparison Across Amplifier Classes at Rated Output Power (%) Class A (reference) <0.005% Class AB (precision) <0.01% Class AB (professional) <0.05% Class AB (standard) <0.1% Class D (modern) 0.01–0.5% Human audibility threshold ~0.3–1% Note that the chart above uses a relative scale for visualization — THD+N figures for Class AB and Class A are both far below human audibility. The practical implication is that the choice between 0.005% and 0.05% THD+N has no audible consequence for loudspeaker reproduction; the meaningful comparison is between amplifier topologies that fall below the audibility threshold and those that approach or exceed it under certain conditions. Efficiency and Thermal Management in Class AB Designs The efficiency of a Class AB loudspeaker amplifier is not a fixed number — it varies with output power level relative to the maximum rating, and this variation has practical consequences for thermal design and operating cost. Efficiency Curves Under Real Music Program Material Under continuous sine wave test signals at full rated power, a Class AB amplifier achieves efficiency around 60–70%. Under typical music program material — which has a crest factor of 10–20 dB, meaning the average power delivered is 10 to 100× lower than the peak — the amplifier spends most of its time at a fraction of its rated output. At these lower output levels, the bias current represents a higher proportion of total current draw, slightly reducing average efficiency to approximately 50–60% during music playback. This is still dramatically better than Class A's fixed full-power dissipation regardless of output level. Heatsink Design Consequences For a practical example: a professional Class AB loudspeaker amplifier delivering 500W into 4 ohms dissipates approximately 200 to 300W as heat at full continuous output — requiring a heatsink with thermal resistance of approximately 0.15 to 0.25°C/W to maintain junction temperatures within safe limits in a 25°C ambient. An equivalent Class A design delivering the same 500W would dissipate 1,000 to 1,500W as heat, requiring a heatsink four to six times larger, or forced-air cooling — making it impractical for rackmount or compact installation formats. Operating Cost Over Time For installed sound systems in commercial environments — running 8 to 16 hours per day — the efficiency advantage of Class AB over Class A translates directly to electricity cost savings. A sound system with 10 channels of 500W amplification operating in Class A would consume approximately 15 to 20 kW continuously; the same system in Class AB consumes approximately 6 to 8 kW under typical music program loads — a saving of roughly 9,000 to 12,000 kWh per year in a 12-hour operating day system. How Class AB Compares to Class D in Practical Loudspeaker Applications Class D has made significant progress in the last decade and now represents a genuine alternative to Class AB in specific applications. Understanding exactly where each topology excels — and where the other holds an advantage — enables well-informed amplifier selection. Criterion Class AB Advantage Class D Advantage Verdict Midrange / treble THD Consistently low across full spectrum Can rise above 10 kHz in some designs Class AB Power efficiency 50–75% 85–95% Class D EMI / switching noise None — fully analog output Requires output filtering; EMI management needed Class AB Damping factor (bass control) 300–1,000+ across audio band Can be reduced by output filter at low freq Class AB Form factor / weight Heavier (transformer + heatsink) Very compact and light (SMPS + small heatsink) Class D Long-term reliability record Decades of proven service life data Shorter history; MOSFET gate failures emerging Class AB Load impedance sensitivity Stable with reactive / low-impedance loads Output filter behavior changes with load impedance Class AB Table 1: Class AB vs Class D loudspeaker amplifier — practical application comparison by criterion The most balanced professional approach for large installed sound systems is a hybrid topology strategy: Class D for subwoofer channels (where high power with low efficiency cost is needed and bass-frequency distortion is less audible) and Class AB for mid/high-frequency channels (where THD, damping factor, and EMI characteristics have the most impact on perceived sound quality). This combination captures the weight and efficiency advantage of Class D where it matters most while preserving the sonic transparency of Class AB in the critical listening range. Real-World Applications Where Class AB Delivers the Most Value The practical dominance of Class AB amplification is clearest in application categories where audio fidelity, reliability, and long-term value are the primary selection criteria — not the lowest possible weight or battery-powered operation. Studio Monitor Active Amplification Active studio monitors — the reference tools used for mixing and mastering decisions that determine how recorded music sounds to listeners worldwide — require the lowest possible amplifier coloration. A Class AB loudspeaker amplifier in an active monitor contributes less than 0.02% THD across the signal chain, ensuring that the monitor reveals the recording faithfully rather than masking problems with its own distortion signature. The consistent damping factor of Class AB also provides the tight, controlled bass reproduction that allows mix engineers to make accurate low-frequency decisions. Live Concert and Event Sound Reinforcement Professional touring amplifier racks have been built on Class AB technology for decades because it combines the power output needed for large venue sound reinforcement — amplifiers rated at 2,000W to 5,000W per channel — with the reliability to operate at sustained high power levels through multi-hour performances without thermal shutdown or component failure. The topology's well-understood failure modes and straightforward serviceability are also valued by touring production companies managing equipment across multiple concurrent shows. Installed AV in Permanent Venues Houses of worship, auditoriums, conference facilities, and broadcast studios represent installations where amplifiers are expected to operate reliably for 10 to 20 years with minimal maintenance intervention. Class AB amplifiers meet this requirement consistently — the topology generates no switching stress on output devices, the long-term drift of Class AB bias circuits is well-understood and easily corrected during routine service, and repair parts remain available long after the initial installation date. The higher weight of Class AB installations is irrelevant in permanent rack installations, while the sonic quality and reliability advantages are fully realized. Premium Consumer Audio At the premium end of the consumer audio market — integrated amplifiers and power amplifiers for high-performance two-channel and home theater systems — Class AB remains the dominant topology because the audience prioritizes sound quality above all other considerations. For a system where the amplifier may cost several thousand dollars and drive loudspeakers costing many times more, the efficiency advantage of Class D is not a meaningful purchasing criterion; the transparency and musical engagement of a well-implemented Class AB design is. Selecting the Right Class AB Amplifier: Key Specifications to Evaluate Choosing between available Class AB loudspeaker amplifiers requires evaluating several specific technical parameters against the requirements of the intended application. Generic power ratings alone are insufficient for meaningful comparison. Specification What It Measures Acceptable Range Professional Grade Target THD+N at rated power Total harmonic distortion + noise <0.1% <0.01% Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR) Max output vs residual noise floor >95 dB >105 dB Damping Factor (8Ω, 20 Hz) Loudspeaker impedance / output impedance >200 >500 Frequency Response (−3 dB) Usable bandwidth at rated power 20 Hz – 20 kHz 20 Hz – 50 kHz or beyond Crosstalk (stereo, 1 kHz) Channel separation (stereo units) <−60 dB <−80 dB Input sensitivity / gain Input voltage for rated output 0.775V (+0 dBu) typical Adjustable gain structure preferred Table 2: Class AB loudspeaker amplifier specification evaluation guide for professional selection When evaluating power ratings, always compare specifications measured under the same conditions: continuous (RMS) power at rated THD, into the specified load impedance, with both channels driven simultaneously (for stereo units). Some manufacturers publish peak or music power ratings that are significantly higher than the continuous rating — these are not comparable to continuous rated figures from other manufacturers. About Ningbo Zhenhai Huage Electronics Co., Ltd. Manufacturer Profile Ningbo Zhenhai Huage Electronics Co., Ltd. is a professional audio enterprise integrating research and development, production, and sales, serving as a professional Class AB loudspeaker amplifier manufacturer and factory. The company has focused for many years on the production of sound mixers, active power amplifiers, microphones, and related electronic components and equipment — building deep application expertise across the full range of professional audio product categories. Huage specializes in custom Class AB loudspeaker amplifiers, maintaining a consistent business policy of high-quality products, attentive service, and reliable reputation. This approach has established long-term and stable cooperative relationships with partner companies domestically and internationally, with OEM services provided to well-known audio brands over an extended period. The company's professional design, production, and testing teams can customize amplifier products to specific customer requirements — covering power rating, form factor, gain structure, protection configuration, and cosmetic finish. R&D + Mfg Integrated Capability OEM Major Brand Services Custom Full Specification Flexibility Global Export Partnerships Frequently Asked Questions Q1 Why do most professional amplifiers use Class AB instead of Class A? + Class A amplifiers dissipate full power as heat regardless of the output signal level — making them impractical for professional power ratings above approximately 50W per channel. A Class A amplifier rated at 500W per channel would dissipate over 1,500W as heat continuously, requiring a massive heatsink, forced-air cooling, and a very large power supply. Class AB achieves THD+N performance within the same practical inaudibility threshold as Class A at professional power levels, while dissipating only 200 to 300W as heat for the same 500W audio output — a difference that defines the entire practical form factor, weight, and operating cost profile of professional amplifier designs. Q2 Is Class AB distortion audible in real listening conditions? + No — at the THD+N levels produced by a well-designed Class AB loudspeaker amplifier (typically 0.005% to 0.05%), distortion is not audible to human listeners under any realistic listening conditions. Psychoacoustic research consistently places the minimum audible distortion threshold for music program material above 0.3% for trained listeners in controlled double-blind conditions. The distortion from a Class AB amplifier is buried at least 15 to 30 dB below that threshold — meaning the room, the loudspeakers, the recording microphones, and the mixing console all contribute more audible coloration to the final sound than the amplifier does. Q3 What loudspeaker impedance works best with a Class AB amplifier? + Most professional Class AB loudspeaker amplifiers are rated for 4 ohm and 8 ohm loads in stereo mode, with some designs supporting 2-ohm stereo operation for driving multiple speakers in parallel. Power output approximately doubles as impedance halves: an amplifier rated at 200W into 8 ohms typically delivers 350 to 400W into 4 ohms. When bridged to mono, the minimum rated impedance typically doubles — a unit rated for 4-ohm stereo operation should only be bridged into 8-ohm loads. Always verify the manufacturer's stated minimum load impedance and never operate below it, as this can cause thermal protection activation or output transistor stress. Q4 How much power should a Class AB amplifier have relative to the loudspeaker rating? + A commonly recommended guideline is to select a Class AB amplifier with a continuous power rating of 1.5 to 2× the loudspeaker's program power handling. For example, a loudspeaker rated at 300W program power is well-served by an amplifier delivering 450 to 600W continuous. This headroom ensures the amplifier is never driven into clipping during normal program peaks — clipping produces high-frequency harmonics that are more damaging to tweeters and midrange drivers than clean power at the same average level. Under-powering (too small an amplifier) is actually more likely to cause loudspeaker damage through clipping than an appropriately oversized amplifier used at reasonable signal levels. Q5 Can Class AB amplifiers be ordered with custom specifications for OEM integration? + Yes. Class AB amplifier topology is highly adaptable to OEM custom specification. Parameters that can typically be customized include: continuous power output per channel, minimum load impedance rating, gain structure and input sensitivity, protection circuit thresholds (clip limiting, thermal, short-circuit), power supply voltage and type (linear or SMPS), mechanical form factor and mounting configuration, connector and interface standards (XLR, TRS, binding posts, terminal blocks), and cosmetic finish. Standard sample lead times from a manufacturer with in-house design capability are typically 3 to 8 weeks for initial prototypes, with production lead times dependent on volume and component procurement. Q6 What protection circuits should a professional Class AB amplifier include? + A professional Class AB loudspeaker amplifier should include at minimum: thermal protection that reduces gain or shuts down before output transistor junction temperatures reach damaging levels; short-circuit protection that limits current if the loudspeaker load is removed or shorted; DC offset protection that disconnects the loudspeaker if a DC component appears at the output (which would damage driver voice coils); and clip limiting or soft clipping that prevents sustained hard clipping from damaging tweeters. For installed or touring applications, delayed turn-on relays (to suppress power-on transients) and inrush current limiting are also important protection features that preserve both the loudspeakers and the facility's electrical distribution. function toggleFaq(btn) { const item = btn.closest('.faq-item'); const isOpen = item.classList.contains('open'); document.querySelectorAll('.faq-item').forEach(el => el.classList.remove('open')); if (!isOpen) item.classList.add('open'); } section { margin-bottom: 40px; } h2 { font-size: 22px; font-weight: bold; text-align: left; margin-bottom: 15px; color: #1a4d2e; padding-left: 14px; border-left: 4px solid #2e8b57; } h3 { font-size: 16px; font-weight: bold; text-align: left; margin-bottom: 15px; color: #2a6b40; } p { font-size: 16px; text-align: left; margin-bottom: 15px; color: #1a2a1a; } ul, ol { margin-bottom: 15px; padding-left: 4px; } li { font-size: 16px; text-align: left; margin-bottom: 5px; color: #1a2a1a; } strong { color: #1a4d2e; font-weight: bold; } table { display: table; text-align: center; border-collapse: collapse; width: 100%; font-size: 16px; margin-bottom: 15px; } caption { caption-side: bottom; font-size: 16px; margin-bottom: 12px; font-style: italic; color: #808080; padding-top: 8px; } thead { display: table-header-group; background: #e8f5ec; } tbody { display: table-row-group; } tr { display: table-row; } th { display: table-cell; font-weight: bold; border: 1px solid #cccccc; padding: 8px; color: #2a6b40; } td { display: table-cell; border: 1px solid #cccccc; padding: 8px; color: #1a2a1a; } tbody tr:hover { background: #f4fbf6; transition: background 0.2s; } .intro-callout { border: 1px solid #a8d8b8; border-left: 5px solid #2e8b57; border-radius: 8px; padding: 20px 24px; margin-bottom: 30px; } .intro-callout p { margin-bottom: 0; font-size: 17px; } .chart-container { border: 1px solid #a8d8b8; border-radius: 12px; padding: 24px; margin-bottom: 20px; } .chart-title { font-size: 15px; font-weight: 600; color: #2a6040; margin-bottom: 18px; text-align: center; } .bar-chart { display: flex; flex-direction: column; gap: 14px; } .bar-row { display: flex; align-items: center; gap: 12px; } .bar-label { width: 210px; font-size: 13px; color: #2a6040; text-align: right; flex-shrink: 0; } .bar-track { flex: 1; background: #c8e8d0; border-radius: 4px; height: 24px; overflow: hidden; } .bar-fill { height: 100%; border-radius: 4px; background: linear-gradient(90deg, #1a7040, #2eb860); animation: barGrow 1.2s ease forwards; transform-origin: left; transform: scaleX(0); display: flex; align-items: center; justify-content: flex-end; padding-right: 8px; } .bar-fill.mid { background: linear-gradient(90deg, #2a8850, #40c070); } @keyframes barGrow { from { transform: scaleX(0); } to { transform: scaleX(1); } } .bar-fill span { font-size: 12px; font-weight: bold; color: #fff; white-space: nowrap; } .highlight-box { border: 1px solid #a8d8b8; border-left: 4px solid #2e8b57; border-radius: 8px; padding: 16px 20px; margin-bottom: 15px; } .highlight-box p { margin-bottom: 0; } .company-card { border: 1px solid #a8d8b8; border-radius: 12px; padding: 28px 32px; margin-bottom: 20px; } .company-badge { display: inline-block; background: #2a6b40; color: #fff; font-size: 12px; font-weight: bold; padding: 4px 12px; border-radius: 20px; margin-bottom: 14px; letter-spacing: 0.05em; text-transform: uppercase; } .company-stats { display: flex; gap: 20px; flex-wrap: wrap; margin-top: 16px; } .stat-item { text-align: center; border: 1px solid #a8d8b8; border-radius: 8px; padding: 12px 18px; } .stat-num { font-size: 22px; font-weight: bold; color: #2e8b57; } .stat-desc { font-size: 12px; color: #2a6040; margin-top: 2px; } .faq-list { display: flex; flex-direction: column; gap: 12px; } .faq-item { border: 1px solid #a8d8b8; border-radius: 10px; overflow: hidden; transition: border-color 0.25s; } .faq-item:hover { border-color: #2e8b57; } .faq-question { width: 100%; background: none; border: none; padding: 16px 20px; text-align: left; cursor: pointer; display: flex; justify-content: space-between; align-items: center; gap: 12px; } .faq-question-text { font-size: 16px; font-weight: bold; color: #1a4d2e; } .faq-icon { width: 24px; height: 24px; border-radius: 50%; background: #c8e8d0; display: flex; align-items: center; justify-content: center; flex-shrink: 0; transition: background 0.2s, transform 0.3s; color: #2e8b57; font-size: 18px; font-weight: 300; line-height: 1; } .faq-item.open .faq-icon { background: #2e8b57; color: #fff; transform: rotate(45deg); } .faq-answer { max-height: 0; overflow: hidden; transition: max-height 0.4s ease, padding 0.3s; padding: 0 20px; color: #2a6040; font-size: 15px; line-height: 1.7; } .faq-item.open .faq-answer { max-height: 340px; padding: 0 20px 16px; } .faq-badge { font-size: 11px; font-weight: bold; color: #2e8b57; background: #c8e8d0; padding: 2px 8px; border-radius: 10px; margin-right: 8px; flex-shrink: 0; }

    Why Choose a Class AB Amplifier for Loudspeakers?
  • Mar,2026 19
    Industry News
    How to Choose the Right DSP25/DSP24 Active Speaker Amplifier?

    Direct Answer: Choosing the right DSP25/DSP24 Series Active Speaker Amplifier comes down to matching output power and channel configuration to your speaker cabinet impedance and application scale, then confirming that the built-in DSP processing, input/output connectivity, and protection features align with your system requirements. The DSP24 suits two-way active systems and medium-power applications, while the DSP25 is designed for higher-output three-way or bi-amplified configurations. Both deliver onboard digital signal processing that eliminates the need for external crossovers or equalisers. This guide covers the key specifications, application scenarios, DSP feature sets, and practical selection criteria you need to make a confident decision when specifying a professional active speaker amplifier from the DSP25/DSP24 series. What Is the DSP25/DSP24 Series Active Speaker Amplifier? The DSP25/DSP24 series represents a category of DSP powered speaker amplifiers designed for integration inside active loudspeaker enclosures or as plate amplifiers mounted directly to speaker cabinets. Unlike traditional passive systems that rely on external amplifiers and analogue crossovers, a DSP powered speaker amplifier combines the amplifier power stages, digital crossover, parametric equaliser, limiter, and protection circuitry into a single compact module. This integration reduces system wiring complexity, eliminates signal degradation across long analogue crossover chains, and enables precise, software-configurable tuning of the loudspeaker system. In professional audio, the result is tighter transient response, more accurate frequency balance, and better protection of driver components compared to passive filter designs. DSP24: typically a two-channel or 2-way active amplifier module — suited to full-range, two-way (woofer + tweeter), or subwoofer applications DSP25: typically a multi-channel configuration supporting three-way or bi-amplified cabinets, or higher total output power per chassis Built-in DSP: digital crossover filters, parametric EQ bands, time alignment delay, and output limiting all programmable via PC software or front-panel interface Protection systems: thermal, overcurrent, short-circuit, DC offset, and clip limiting to protect both amplifier and driver from damage DSP24 vs DSP25: Core Specification Differences Before selecting a model, it is essential to understand the specification differences between the DSP24 and DSP25. The table below summarises the typical differentiating parameters. Parameter DSP24 DSP25 Output Channels 2 2 – 4 (configurable) Total Output Power (RMS) 400 – 800 W 800 – 2,000 W Crossover Configuration 2-way (LF / HF) 2-way / 3-way selectable Parametric EQ Bands per Channel 4 – 6 6 – 10 DSP Processing Resolution 24-bit / 48 kHz 32-bit / 96 kHz Signal Input Type Analogue (XLR / RCA) Analogue + Digital (AES/EBU optional) Time Alignment Delay Up to 10 ms per channel Up to 20 ms per channel Preset Memory Slots 4 – 8 16 – 32 Cooling Method Convection / small fan Temperature-controlled variable fan Typical Application Two-way cabinets, stage monitors, subwoofers Three-way line arrays, large-format PA, studio main monitors Table 1 — Typical specification comparison between DSP24 and DSP25 series active speaker amplifier modules. Exact values vary by specific model variant. Total Output Power Range — DSP24 vs DSP25 Series (Watts RMS) DSP24 — Entry Configuration 400 W DSP24 — High-Power Configuration 800 W DSP25 — Standard Configuration 1,200 W DSP25 — High-Power Configuration 2,000 W Chart 1 — The DSP25 supports up to 2.5× the output power of the DSP24, making it the choice for large-format or high-SPL applications. Understanding the DSP Feature Set and Why It Matters The defining advantage of a DSP powered speaker amplifier over a conventional analogue plate amp is the programmable digital signal processing engine. Understanding the individual DSP functions helps you assess whether a given model meets your system design requirements. Digital Crossover Filters The crossover divides the full-range input signal into frequency bands routed to each driver — low-frequency to woofer, high-frequency to tweeter, and optionally mid-frequency to a midrange driver. The DSP24/DSP25 series implements crossover filters digitally, allowing precise selection of filter type (Linkwitz-Riley, Butterworth, Bessel), crossover frequency, and slope steepness (typically 12 dB/octave to 48 dB/octave). Steeper slopes reduce inter-driver interference at the crossover point, improving polar behaviour in multi-way cabinets. Parametric Equalisation Each output channel carries multiple bands of fully parametric EQ, allowing independent control of centre frequency, gain (+/- 15 dB typical), and bandwidth (Q factor). This enables the amplifier module to compensate for the acoustic response of the cabinet enclosure and driver — effectively tuning the speaker system to a flat, predictable response without external outboard EQ hardware. The DSP25, with up to 10 parametric bands per channel, supports more complex correction than the DSP24's 4–6 band implementation. Time Alignment Delay In multi-way speakers, the acoustic centres of different drivers are physically offset from each other. Time alignment delay — applied digitally per channel — compensates for this offset, ensuring that sound from all drivers arrives at the listening position simultaneously. Even a 1 ms misalignment at a two-way crossover point produces measurable phase distortion. The DSP25's extended delay range of up to 20 ms per channel accommodates larger cabinets and longer acoustic path differences in line array configurations. Limiter and Driver Protection Integrated peak and RMS limiters in the DSP engine prevent both amplifier clipping and driver over-excursion. The RMS limiter monitors long-term power delivery to protect voice coil thermal limits; the peak limiter clamps instantaneous transients that would cause mechanical damage. In the DSP25/DSP24 Series Active Speaker Amplifier, these limiter thresholds are configurable per channel and linked to the specific driver's power handling specification — a critical advantage when specifying a custom active speaker amplifier for a proprietary cabinet design. Preset Storage and Remote Control Both models store complete DSP configurations as recall presets, selectable via front-panel switch or PC software. The DSP25's larger preset memory (16–32 slots) is particularly useful in rental and touring applications where a single amplifier module may be deployed in different cabinet types across different productions. Remote control via RS-485, USB, or Ethernet (depending on variant) enables centralised system management without physical access to each cabinet. Matching the Right Model to Your Application The DSP24 and DSP25 are not interchangeable in all scenarios. The following application profiles help identify the correct choice for common professional audio deployments. Fixed Installation: Installed Sound and AV Systems Conference rooms, houses of worship, retail spaces, and lecture theatres typically use two-way full-range cabinets driven by a single stereo amplifier. The DSP24 Series Active Speaker Amplifier is well suited here: its two-channel output, 4–6 band EQ per channel, and analogue XLR input match the requirements of a standard two-way installation cabinet. Preset storage allows the integrator to configure and lock a tuning that cannot be inadvertently altered by non-technical building users. Live Sound Reinforcement: Mid-Size Venues For touring or installed PA systems in venues up to 500–1,000 seats, the DSP25 provides the power headroom and multi-way crossover capability required for three-way main cabinets or bi-amplified subwoofer/satellite configurations. The higher DSP processing resolution (32-bit / 96 kHz) of the DSP25 supports more transparent signal handling at the high SPL levels these applications demand. A typical mid-size line array system using the DSP25 can achieve consistent SPL across a coverage angle of 90°–120° with appropriately configured directional EQ and delay settings. Studio Monitor and Reference Speaker Design Manufacturers of active studio monitors and reference speakers specify the DSP25 when designing three-way reference systems requiring precise frequency response, low group delay, and configurable room correction EQ. The 32-bit processing resolution and 10-band parametric EQ allow the acoustic behaviour of the enclosure and room interaction to be corrected to within ±1 dB of target response — a specification level required for professional monitoring applications. Subwoofer Systems A single-channel or bridged DSP24 configuration is a practical and cost-efficient solution for powered subwoofer cabinets. The DSP engine applies a high-pass filter to protect the woofer from sub-sonic content below its usable range, while a configurable low-pass crossover frequency (typically 60–120 Hz) integrates cleanly with satellite or top-cabinet systems. The DSP24's power range of 400–800 W covers the majority of subwoofer driver requirements from 12-inch to 18-inch cone formats. Custom OEM and Cabinet Manufacturer Applications For cabinet manufacturers developing proprietary active loudspeaker products, a custom active speaker amplifier based on the DSP25/DSP24 platform can be factory-configured with application-specific crossover, EQ, and limiter settings that match the exact cabinet and driver combination. This eliminates end-user configuration risk and ensures consistent performance across every unit of a production run. OEM variants may also support custom front-panel branding and locked preset functionality. Recommended Model by Application — DSP24 vs DSP25 Fixed Install (2-way, up to 800 W) DSP24 Subwoofer (single/bridged) DSP24 Stage Monitor (2-way) DSP24 / DSP25 Mid-Size PA Line Array (3-way) DSP25 Studio Reference Monitor (3-way) DSP25 Custom OEM Cabinet (configurable) DSP25 Chart 2 — DSP24 covers two-way and subwoofer applications; DSP25 is required for three-way, high-power, or precision reference applications. Key Technical Criteria for Selecting the Right Model Once the application profile is defined, the following technical parameters should be confirmed before finalising the selection of a professional active speaker amplifier from the DSP25/DSP24 series. Output Power and Impedance Matching Match the amplifier's per-channel output power to the driver's continuous (RMS) power handling with a headroom factor of 1.5×–2×. For example, a woofer rated at 300 W RMS should be driven by a channel capable of delivering 450–600 W RMS. Operating an amplifier continuously at clipping reduces headroom and accelerates driver failure — the built-in limiter in the DSP24/DSP25 series prevents clipping but should not be relied upon as the primary power budget calculation. Confirm the rated output impedance match: most plate amplifier modules deliver rated power into 4 Ω or 8 Ω loads. Using a driver with an impedance lower than the amplifier's minimum rated load will trigger overcurrent protection and reduce available power. Crossover Frequency and Filter Order The crossover frequency must be set within the usable range of both adjacent drivers — above the woofer's high-frequency limit and below the tweeter's low-frequency excursion limit. For a two-way system crossing over near 2–3 kHz, a Linkwitz-Riley 24 dB/octave (LR4) filter is the industry standard because it produces flat summed response and 90° phase alignment between adjacent bands. The DSP24 and DSP25 both support LR4 as a selectable filter type. Signal-to-Noise Ratio and Dynamic Range For studio and high-fidelity reference applications, confirm the amplifier's signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) — specified relative to full rated output. A minimum SNR of 100 dB A-weighted is acceptable for most professional applications; reference monitors may require 108 dB or higher to avoid audible noise floor at moderate listening levels. The DSP25's 32-bit processing path maintains lower quantisation noise than the DSP24's 24-bit engine, which is significant in high-dynamic-range material reproduction. Input Sensitivity and Gain Structure Input sensitivity determines how much input voltage is required to drive the amplifier to full output. A sensitivity of 0 dBu (0.775 V) is standard for professional line-level sources; some modules offer selectable sensitivity between -10 dBV (consumer) and +4 dBu (professional). Mismatched gain structure between the driving mixer/DSP processor and the amplifier input causes either signal clipping at the input stage or insufficient output level — confirm the specification before wiring the system. Protection and Reliability Features A professional active speaker amplifier deployed in live sound or permanent installation must include a comprehensive protection suite. Confirm the following are present in the selected DSP24/DSP25 variant: Thermal protection: automatic output reduction or shutdown when heatsink temperature exceeds safe operating threshold DC offset protection: immediately disconnects the speaker output if DC voltage is detected — critical to prevent driver voice coil burn-out Short-circuit protection: protects output stage transistors from wiring faults or damaged speaker cables Inrush current limiting: soft-start circuitry prevents power supply stress on power-up, important in multi-cabinet rack installations Clip limiting: engages before the amplifier enters hard clipping, preventing harsh-sounding distortion and driver stress at high drive levels Installation, Integration, and Configuration Best Practices Selecting the correct DSP25/DSP24 Series Active Speaker Amplifier is only part of the process. Proper installation and initial configuration directly affect system performance and long-term reliability. Mechanical fit and ventilation: confirm the module fits the cabinet's plate amplifier cutout dimension (typically 220 × 190 mm or 260 × 210 mm depending on variant). Ensure at least 30–50 mm of clearance around the heatsink for convection cooling; in rack or enclosed enclosure mounting, verify that the cooling fan exhaust is not blocked. Speaker wiring: use twisted-pair cable with a cross-sectional area matched to the current draw — at minimum 1.5 mm² for runs up to 1 m and 2.5 mm² for longer internal wiring. Keep wiring away from signal input cables to prevent hum induction. Initial DSP configuration: upload the manufacturer-recommended preset for your driver and cabinet combination if available, or begin with a flat EQ and set crossover frequencies and slopes based on driver datasheet specifications. Run a swept sine measurement with a calibrated measurement microphone before applying corrective EQ. Limiter calibration: set the RMS limiter threshold to the driver's continuous power rating and the peak limiter to the driver's peak power rating. Running without correctly set limiters voids most driver warranties and risks field failures during high-SPL events. Lock and document presets: once the system is tuned and verified, lock the active preset to prevent accidental changes. Document the full DSP parameter set and store it externally — this enables rapid recovery if the amplifier module requires replacement in the field. Impact of DSP Parameters on Measured System Performance (Relative Improvement, %) Time Alignment Correction Phase response: up to 90% improvement Parametric EQ (room correction) Frequency flatness: up to 80% improvement Digital Crossover (vs analogue) Crossover accuracy: up to 70% improvement Limiter Configuration Driver protection reliability: up to 60% improvement Chart 3 — All four DSP functions contribute measurably to system performance; time alignment and EQ deliver the largest gains over uncorrected passive systems. When to Specify a Custom Active Speaker Amplifier Standard DSP24 and DSP25 variants cover the majority of application requirements, but certain projects benefit from a custom active speaker amplifier configuration. Consider a custom specification when: Non-standard driver impedance or power handling: drivers with unusual impedance curves, high excursion requirements, or extreme power handling may require modified output stage tuning outside the standard model range OEM production runs: cabinet manufacturers integrating the amplifier as part of a branded product line benefit from factory-locked DSP presets, custom front-panel labelling, and volume-pricing arrangements Special environmental requirements: installations in high-humidity, high-altitude, or high-ambient-temperature environments may require modified thermal management, conformal coating of PCBs, or derated output ratings Unique I/O or control requirements: systems requiring Dante/AES67 digital audio networking, proprietary control protocols, or non-standard connector formats typically require a custom I/O configuration that is not available in the standard DSP25/DSP24 product Regulatory certification for specific markets: products destined for markets with specific safety or EMC certification requirements (e.g., UL for North America, CCC for China, RCM for Australia) may require variant-specific testing and documentation When submitting a request for a custom active speaker amplifier based on the DSP25/DSP24 platform, provide full driver specifications (impedance, power handling, frequency range, sensitivity), target SPL requirements, cabinet dimensions, and intended deployment environment. This information enables the manufacturer to specify the correct output stage, cooling design, and DSP configuration for the application. Frequently Asked Questions Q1: What is the key difference between the DSP24 and DSP25 active speaker amplifier? + The DSP24 is a two-channel module suited to two-way cabinets and subwoofers, with output power ranging from 400–800 W RMS and 24-bit/48 kHz DSP processing. The DSP25 supports two to four output channels for three-way or higher-power configurations, delivers up to 2,000 W total output, and uses 32-bit/96 kHz processing for higher resolution signal handling. Choose the DSP24 for standard two-way applications and the DSP25 when three-way crossover, higher SPL output, or greater DSP precision is required. Q2: Can I use the DSP25/DSP24 series amplifier with any speaker driver? + The amplifier module is compatible with any speaker driver whose impedance falls within the module's rated output impedance range (typically 4 Ω or 8 Ω) and whose power handling is within the output power range of the selected channel. The DSP engine is then configured — via crossover frequency, EQ, and limiter settings — to match the specific driver's characteristics. For non-standard impedance or power requirements, a custom active speaker amplifier configuration should be specified. Q3: How is the DSP programmed and configured? + The DSP25/DSP24 Series Active Speaker Amplifier is configured via PC software connected through a USB or RS-485 interface. The software provides a graphical interface for setting crossover frequencies and filter types, adjusting parametric EQ bands, setting limiter thresholds, and applying time alignment delay per channel. Completed configurations are saved as presets to the module's onboard memory and can be recalled from the front panel without a PC connection. Some variants also support Ethernet-based remote control for integration with building automation or system management software. Q4: What is the advantage of a DSP powered speaker amplifier over a passive crossover design? + A DSP powered speaker amplifier provides several measurable advantages over a passive crossover: crossover frequency and slope are adjustable without changing physical components; parametric EQ can correct the acoustic response of the cabinet without external hardware; time alignment delay compensates for driver offset to improve phase coherence; and independent limiting per driver protects each driver according to its own power rating. Passive crossovers are fixed at manufacture, degrade with component ageing, and cannot be tuned after installation. Q5: Is the DSP24/DSP25 suitable for outdoor and touring applications? + Standard DSP24/DSP25 modules are designed for indoor or protected enclosure installation. For outdoor touring applications, the amplifier must be housed within a weatherproof speaker enclosure that protects it from rain, humidity, and temperature extremes. The amplifier module itself should be specified with conformal-coated PCBs for high-humidity environments. The temperature-controlled fan on the DSP25 is well suited to high-ambient-temperature outdoor deployments, as it actively manages heatsink temperature rather than relying on passive convection alone. Q6: How do I verify that the amplifier is correctly matched to my cabinet before final installation? + Before finalising the cabinet build, run an acoustic measurement using a calibrated measurement microphone and analysis software (such as a swept-sine measurement at 1 metre on-axis) with the DSP configured to a flat starting preset. Compare the measured response against the driver datasheet to identify peaks and dips requiring EQ correction. Set crossover frequencies to where the driver responses naturally cross at -6 dB, apply time alignment to achieve minimum phase coherence at the crossover point, then verify the summed response is within ±3 dB of target across the operating range. 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    How to Choose the Right DSP25/DSP24 Active Speaker Amplifier?
  • Mar,2026 12
    Industry News
    How Does Class H Technology Compare to Other Amplifier Classes?

    Class H amplifiers deliver superior energy efficiency compared to Class A, B, AB, and D designs by dynamically tracking the audio signal and adjusting the supply voltage in real time. This makes Class H loudspeaker amplifiers the preferred choice for professional touring sound, installed audio systems, and high-demand live performance environments where thermal management and power consumption are critical concerns. In short: if efficiency and audio performance must coexist at high power levels, Class H is consistently the most balanced solution available today. What Is Class H Amplifier Technology? A Class H amplifier is a refined evolution of Class AB topology. It uses a multi-rail or continuously variable power supply that modulates the supply voltage to stay just above the instantaneous audio signal level. Rather than maintaining a fixed high-voltage rail at all times, the amplifier "rides" the signal envelope — dramatically reducing the voltage headroom wasted as heat during low-level passages. This rail-switching mechanism is the defining characteristic of Class H audio performance. Two or more supply rails (for example, 35V and 90V) are selected dynamically. When the signal is quiet, only the lower rail is active. When transient peaks demand more voltage, the higher rail engages — typically within microseconds. The result is a dramatic reduction in idle and average dissipation without sacrificing peak power capability. Modern Class H loudspeaker amplifier designs may also implement continuous envelope tracking rather than discrete steps, further smoothing the transition and minimizing any artifacts introduced by rail switching. How Class H Compares to Other Amplifier Classes Understanding Class H amplifier efficiency requires placing it in context alongside the most common amplifier topologies used in audio today. Amplifier Class Typical Efficiency Heat Dissipation Audio Linearity Best Use Case Class A 15–35% Very High Excellent High-end home audio Class B 65–75% Moderate Poor (crossover distortion) Rarely used alone Class AB 50–70% Moderate–High Good General-purpose audio Class H 70–90% Low–Moderate Very Good Pro audio, touring, PA Class D 85–95% Very Low Good (with filtering) Portable, subwoofers, DSP systems Comparison of amplifier classes across key performance metrics. Values represent typical operating conditions with music program material. Class H occupies a strategic position in the amplifier landscape: it achieves efficiency figures rivaling Class D while maintaining the analog signal path and linearity associated with Class AB. For applications where sonic purity and reliability under sustained high-output conditions both matter, this is a compelling combination. Class H Amplifier Efficiency: The Numbers That Matter Efficiency is the primary engineering argument for Class H. Consider a 1000W rated amplifier operating under typical music program material, where average power output is roughly 10–15% of peak: A Class AB design at 60% efficiency would dissipate approximately 667W as heat at full output. A Class H design at 85% efficiency reduces heat dissipation to roughly 176W under real-world music conditions. Over an 8-hour live event, this difference translates to approximately 3.9 kWh saved per amplifier channel — significant in large-scale installations with dozens of amplifiers. Reduced heat generation also extends component lifespan. Electrolytic capacitors, output transistors, and power transformers all degrade faster at elevated temperatures. Lower operating temperatures in energy-saving audio amplifiers based on Class H topology can extend mean time between failures (MTBF) by a measurable margin. (function() { var ctx = document.getElementById('efficiencyChart').getContext('2d'); new Chart(ctx, { type: 'bar', data: { labels: ['Class A', 'Class B', 'Class AB', 'Class H', 'Class D'], datasets: [{ label: 'Typical Efficiency (%)', data: [25, 70, 60, 82, 90], backgroundColor: [ 'rgba(180,180,200,0.7)', 'rgba(160,190,220,0.7)', 'rgba(120,170,210,0.7)', 'rgba(30,120,200,0.9)', 'rgba(90,200,180,0.7)' ], borderColor: [ 'rgba(180,180,200,1)', 'rgba(160,190,220,1)', 'rgba(120,170,210,1)', 'rgba(30,120,200,1)', 'rgba(90,200,180,1)' ], borderWidth: 1.5, borderRadius: 5 }] }, options: { responsive: false, plugins: { legend: { display: false }, title: { display: true, text: 'Amplifier Class Efficiency Comparison (%)', font: { size: 15, weight: 'bold' }, color: '#333', padding: { bottom: 14 } }, tooltip: { callbacks: { label: function(ctx) { return ctx.parsed.y + '%'; } } } }, scales: { y: { beginAtZero: true, max: 100, ticks: { font: { size: 13 }, color: '#444', callback: v => v + '%' }, grid: { color: 'rgba(200,200,200,0.4)' } }, x: { ticks: { font: { size: 13 }, color: '#444' }, grid: { display: false } } } } }); })(); Class H Audio Performance: Sonic Characteristics Class H audio performance is consistently rated among the highest of any analog-path topology. Because the output stage is fundamentally Class AB — with the addition of dynamic supply modulation — the inherent sonic signature is clean, low-distortion, and linear across the audible spectrum. Total Harmonic Distortion (THD) Well-designed Class H loudspeaker amplifiers typically achieve THD figures below 0.05% at rated power, with many professional-grade designs measuring below 0.01% across the 20Hz–20kHz band. This is comparable to the best Class AB designs and significantly better than early Class D implementations, which often struggled above 10kHz due to switching artifacts. Damping Factor and Load Stability Class H amplifiers maintain high damping factors — commonly 200 to over 1000 — which provides tight control over loudspeaker cone motion and contributes to accurate bass reproduction. Unlike Class D amplifiers, Class H designs do not require output low-pass filters, which eliminates one potential source of impedance variation and phase shift at high frequencies. Transient Response The rail-switching speed in Class H designs — often less than 5 microseconds in modern implementations — ensures that transient peaks are handled cleanly without clipping or rail-sag artifacts. This is a measurable advantage over fixed-rail Class AB designs operating near their thermal limits, where supply sag under burst conditions can introduce low-frequency intermodulation distortion. Energy-Saving Audio Amplifiers: Real-World Impact The push toward energy-saving audio amplifiers is not purely technical — it is increasingly driven by regulatory standards, sustainability mandates, and operational cost management in professional audio installations. Standards such as the EU's ErP (Energy-related Products) Directive and California's Title 20 regulations now impose standby and idle power limits on audio amplifiers. Class H designs consistently achieve compliance with these standards more readily than Class AB counterparts due to their lower idle dissipation. (function() { var ctx2 = document.getElementById('heatChart').getContext('2d'); new Chart(ctx2, { type: 'line', data: { labels: ['10%', '20%', '40%', '60%', '80%', '100%'], datasets: [ { label: 'Class AB Heat Dissipation (W)', data: [180, 240, 340, 430, 520, 667], borderColor: 'rgba(200,80,80,0.85)', backgroundColor: 'rgba(200,80,80,0.08)', borderWidth: 2.5, pointRadius: 5, tension: 0.35, fill: true }, { label: 'Class H Heat Dissipation (W)', data: [28, 45, 80, 115, 148, 176], borderColor: 'rgba(30,120,200,0.9)', backgroundColor: 'rgba(30,120,200,0.08)', borderWidth: 2.5, pointRadius: 5, tension: 0.35, fill: true } ] }, options: { responsive: false, plugins: { legend: { display: true, position: 'top', labels: { font: { size: 13 }, color: '#333' } }, title: { display: true, text: 'Heat Dissipation vs. Output Level (1000W Amplifier)', font: { size: 15, weight: 'bold' }, color: '#333', padding: { bottom: 14 } } }, scales: { y: { beginAtZero: true, ticks: { font: { size: 13 }, color: '#444', callback: v => v + 'W' }, grid: { color: 'rgba(200,200,200,0.4)' } }, x: { title: { display: true, text: 'Output Level (% of rated power)', font: { size: 13 }, color: '#666' }, ticks: { font: { size: 13 }, color: '#444' }, grid: { display: false } } } } }); })(); In a stadium or arena installation with 64 amplifier channels, the cumulative reduction in heat dissipation offered by Class H technology can meaningfully reduce HVAC load — a non-trivial operational consideration in venues where climate control represents a major energy overhead. Class H vs. Class D: A Closer Look Class D is the most common competitor to Class H in the professional audio market. Both are considered energy-saving audio amplifiers, but their approaches differ fundamentally: Signal path: Class H uses a linear analog output stage. Class D switches transistors on and off at high frequency (typically 300kHz–1MHz) and reconstructs the signal with an output filter. EMI: Class D amplifiers generate significant high-frequency electromagnetic interference that requires careful shielding and filtering. Class H produces negligible switching noise. Output filter interaction: Class D's required output filter interacts with loudspeaker impedance, causing frequency response variations. Class H has no output filter and therefore no such interaction. Weight and size: Class D is generally lighter and more compact due to smaller power supplies and heatsinks, which is advantageous for portable and touring applications. Ruggedness: Class H designs tend to be more tolerant of marginal or reactive loads, making them preferable in installed systems where loudspeaker impedance characteristics may be complex. For critical listening environments, broadcast facilities, and fixed installations where sonic integrity and load tolerance are paramount, Class H remains the preferred choice even where Class D is available at comparable power levels. Key Applications for Class H Loudspeaker Amplifiers Class H loudspeaker amplifiers are particularly well-suited for scenarios that combine high sustained output with long operating hours: Live concert touring: Racks of amplifiers run continuously for hours. Reduced heat dissipation lowers cooling requirements and improves reliability on the road. Permanent installation (churches, theatres, arenas): Energy compliance, operational cost, and low-maintenance operation are all served by Class H amplifier efficiency. Broadcast and studio monitoring: Where absolute accuracy and minimal coloration are required, Class H audio performance provides the necessary transparency. Theme parks and large attractions: High uptime requirements and ambient temperature management benefit from the lower idle dissipation of Class H designs. High-power subwoofer amplification: Sustained bass program material drives average power levels higher than full-range content, making efficiency gains more significant. Interactive Efficiency Estimator Use the tool below to estimate heat dissipation savings when switching from Class AB to Class H in a real installation. Amplifier Rated Power (W) Number of Channels Operating Hours per Day Calculate Savings function calcSavings() { var power = parseFloat(document.getElementById('cPower').value) || 1000; var channels = parseInt(document.getElementById('cChannels').value) || 16; var hours = parseFloat(document.getElementById('cHours').value) || 8; var abEff = 0.60, hEff = 0.84; var abHeat = power * (1 - abEff) / abEff; var hHeat = power * (1 - hEff) / hEff; var saved = (abHeat - hHeat) * channels; var kwhDay = saved * hours / 1000; var kwhYear = kwhDay * 365; var res = document.getElementById('calcResult'); res.style.display = 'block'; res.innerHTML = 'Results for ' + channels + ' channels at ' + power + 'W rated:' + 'Class AB heat per channel: ' + abHeat.toFixed(0) + 'W' + 'Class H heat per channel: ' + hHeat.toFixed(0) + 'W' + 'Total heat reduction: ' + saved.toFixed(0) + 'W' + 'Energy saved per day: ' + kwhDay.toFixed(2) + ' kWh' + 'Energy saved per year: ' + kwhYear.toFixed(0) + ' kWh'; } Limitations and Design Considerations Class H is not universally the correct choice. Several factors may favor alternative topologies: Complexity: The multi-rail power supply and envelope detection circuitry add design complexity and component count compared to simple Class AB designs. Weight: Linear power supplies in Class H designs are heavier than switch-mode supplies used in Class D. For portable touring applications, this may be a deciding factor. Cost of implementation: Multi-rail supply engineering increases manufacturing complexity. This may not be justified in lower-power consumer applications. Rail switching artifacts: Poorly implemented Class H designs can introduce audible artifacts at rail transition points. Careful design of detection speed and hysteresis is essential to avoid this. When these limitations are addressed through careful engineering, the Class H loudspeaker amplifier consistently delivers an outstanding combination of efficiency and sonic performance that is difficult to match with other topologies in high-power professional environments. Frequently Asked Questions Q1: Is Class H better than Class D for professional audio? A1: It depends on priorities. Class H offers superior load tolerance, no output filter interaction, and lower EMI, making it preferred for critical listening and complex loudspeaker loads. Class D is lighter and slightly more efficient, which benefits portable touring systems. For fixed professional installations, Class H audio performance is generally the preferred choice. Q2: How does Class H amplifier efficiency affect operating costs in a venue? A2: Class H reduces heat dissipation by roughly 60–70% compared to Class AB under real-world music content. In a venue with many amplifier channels operating daily, this reduction in wasted energy and heat output lowers both electricity consumption and HVAC load, contributing to meaningful operational savings over time. Q3: Does Class H technology affect sound quality compared to Class AB? A3: When properly designed, Class H produces audio performance that is indistinguishable from — or superior to — Class AB. The rail-switching mechanism operates faster than any audible event, and THD figures in well-engineered Class H loudspeaker amplifiers are typically below 0.05%, comparable to the best Class AB designs. Q4: Can Class H amplifiers meet modern energy efficiency regulations? A4: Yes. Energy-saving audio amplifiers based on Class H topology typically comply with EU ErP directives and similar regional standards due to their low idle dissipation. This makes them a suitable choice for new installations where regulatory compliance is a requirement. Q5: What is the main difference between Class G and Class H amplifiers? A5: Class G uses two or more discrete supply rails that switch in steps based on signal level. Class H uses a continuously variable or closely tracked supply voltage that follows the signal envelope more precisely. Class H is generally considered a more refined and higher-performing evolution of the Class G approach, offering smoother transitions and lower distortion at rail crossover points.

    How Does Class H Technology Compare to Other Amplifier Classes?