Stating - "you don't seem to have a clue" - is not really 'trying to understand' my view about class D amplifiers.
Nevertheless:
The Graph below shows this anomaly I first spoke about, in a different way, which may be more helpful.
This is taken from an Infineon chip at random, but all chips seem to have a similar anomaly. Being a chip, does not automatically make it worse or better than having discrete components (or a combination for higher power) - so the 'chip' term is not important - as you may well know, there are two typical ways to design a class D - one is PWM using a triangle wave and a comparator, and the other is free running without the triangle wave. There may be others, or some with added signal processing.
I'll take a wild guess that some really high speed DSPs or MCUs (ARMs etc.) can do the same job simply by inputting an analogue signal into an 24 or 32 bit ADC, then outputting it as a PWM (PWM DAC), using it's internal timer, and some MOSFET Drivers.
So, many (not necessarily all) non-processor based class D configurations are going to have a similar characteristic.
The graph clearly shows that at 6 kHz, the distortion is remarkably higher. You could claim for <0.02% at 1 kHz, 1 to 20 Watts in the amplifier specification, whereas at 6 kHz, the distortion is close to 0.1% - this is a big difference.
Seeing as the harmonics of a 6 kHz sine is at and beyond 12 kHz, for many of us, this is not that much of a problem. This is why I wasn't that keen on Class D, even if the specs claimed 0.001% THD at 1 kHz.
But now I have seen the Hypex range, with the help of this thread, my view is a little different - these do still have this increase in distortion at around 6 kHz/7 kHz [with an 8 Ohm load], but it's low enough not to worry about. So I'm going to get one of their products to try out. On the other hand, is this sudden increase in distortion indirectly noticeable or influential? - that's another question - I'll soon find this out for myself.
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