I ran an experiment last week. I just got an ATI AT602, their bottom-of-the-line 60w/90w/ch (8/4 ohm rating) stereo amp for use in my simple video system. For grins, before I installed the AT602 in the cabinet I swapped out my ATI AT3005 (being used in 3002 mode) from my he-man audio system (Salon 2 speakers) and used some XLR-to-RCA adapters to insert the AT602 into the signal path. The AT602 does not have balanced inputs. I wanted to see if I could hear differences, and to be perfectly honest, I figured I would. You know, I'm such a world-renown golden ear and all.
The AT3005 uses fully differential circuitry from input to output, and 24 bipolar output transistors per channel, and has well over 450w/ch into the 4 ohm load of the Salon 2s. Also, an AT3005 used in stereo mode puts a dedicated transformer on each channel, while a normal AT3002 would get only one transformer shared between the channels, so the AT3005 would have an advantage, perhaps. While not quite a Krell or a Pass Labs, it's a pretty good amp. I use a dedicated 20 amp mains circuit wired with 12/3 for the amplifier.
I don't have a facility to switch back and forth between the amps quickly, and this isn't a DBT. I was just curious if I could hear any differences.
I used various CDs I normally use for speaker testing, that I know are quite revealing of subtle differences between speakers. One CD I bought recently that sounds different on different speakers is
this Peter Erskine CD. He does a lot of of brushwork on the snare and the cymbals that is surprisingly revealing of differences between speakers, but I couldn't hear any differences between the amps. None. Damn.
I tried several CDs featuring violins and chamber orchestras played at realistic volumes, and, still, I couldn't hear any differences. Strings tend to highlight distortion and congestion. I was surprised that the AT602 sounded identical to me in this case. I expected to hear some congestion with the smaller amp. I was listening at some substantial volume levels. Hmmm.
I have two favorite CDs for testing a speaker's ability to reproduce complex arrangements, namely
this Spyro Gyra CD and
this Papa Doo Run Run Beach Boys tribute CD. I posted some time back that I was able to get the AT3005 to clip on the Papa Doo Run Run CD.
On these CDs the differences were easy to discern, and I have no doubt I could pass a DBT. Played at volumes driving measured 102db peaks at my listening position the AT3005 blew the AT602 away in clarity, detail at high volumes, lack of congestion, and what some people call "jump factor". Yeah, I'm confident the entire difference can be explained by the AT3005 having at least 8db more potential output than the AT602. For all of the balanced end-to-end topology advantages of the AT3005, I have to concede that within the power envelops of the two amps there's no way I could pick out differences between them. I would guess the actual noise and distortion level of the AT602 would be 3-6db worse than the AT3005, but apparently my ears have gotten too old to detect it. Maybe when I was 25.
Now, these are two Class AB amps from the same company, so this isn't a Class D versus Class A comparison, which would be more interesting. After Gene's test of the Pass Labs X350 I would like to hear one in my system, to see if I could hear a difference, because it has the cleanest 1w FFT I've ever seen, and perhaps compare it to one of the Crown amps ADTG raves about. With the ATI amps within their performance envelops, however, I have to admit defeat. I wouldn't even consider a DBT bet on them.