Class B Circuit Opinions...

Mark Tillotson said:
Well, very much depends on how you define the classes

My definition: a class B amplifier has a transfer characteristic whose slope becomes zero at one point, the origin.

Class B is unsuitable for audio because the slew rate required to straighten the transfer characteristic becomes infinite.

The OP's circuit is a hybrid that combines a class B amplifier with a class AB amplifier. It avoids the problem of zero slope and infinite slew rate at the cost of being two amplifiers. At this point, I would say just use class AB.
Ed
 
Try this class B with your transistors. It saturates with -10v. Maybe another opamp is better.
classB ooamp.JPG
 
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That is, maybe PMA doesn't see an improvement with 150 ohm because there is already more current flowing through the base-emitter capacitances than through that resistor when the circuit is going through the crossover region. I don't know, it's just a hypothesis.

Maybe this might help to understand?

Plots without 150R, including opamp output current
classB_THD_10kHz_time_noresistor.png

Plots with 150R
classB_THD_10kHz_time_resistor150R.png

Comparison of THD vs. level at 10kHz, with and without 150R resistor
classB_THDlevel_10kHz_w-wo_150R.png

Loopgain stability analysis
classB_sch_LG.png

Stability with 8R//capacitive load
classB_sch_LG_Cap.png
 
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Using ths6012 same as headphone amp tpa6120 biased 0.5v base voltages, I get the following. The gain is sufficient to saturate with less than 2vp
tpa6120.JPG
 

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These are sim files for the current dumping' 741 amplifier. This fascinated me as a youngster.

I think it should click and run as everything is in the folder. The two voltage sources replace the diodes in the original and are the key to getting good performance by biasing the driver stage up to the point of conduction of the outputs.

Screenshot 2023-12-08 104931.png
 

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I don't see what transistors you are using. I tested the same opamp with chosen bjt and got 0.0003% 1khz 11v 8ohm.
BD139/140. Microcap 11 Professional. You are comparing apples and oranges. I tested at 10kHz and gain 23x and you can see it from attachments in my post #48. You are testing at gain 11x and 1kHz. Loopgain at 10kHz is of 20dB less than at 1kHz. You cannot take two different test conditions and make a comparison. It does not make any sense. Best to build the circuit, if you want to be serious. Simulator models precision is limited.
 
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@HAYK

THD vs. power for circuit gain 11x, at 1kHz

classB_sch_dump_THDlevel1kHz_gain11.png

Quite a difference compared to 10kHz THDlevel and gain 23x, right? We need to compare apples to apples, not apples to pears. Still, we can see inevitable underbiased class B issue.

And you definitely cannot get 11Vrms from +/-15V power supplies. 11Vrms makes 15.55Vpeak, +/-15.55Vp, which exceeds power supply range.
 
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The d44hhv19&Co are not modeled correctly as they conduct with 0.4v Vbe. Adjusted cut off, using the LM4562, I still get 0.0003% for 1v to 10v, 8 or 4ohm for 1khz.
Using TPA6120 is a better choice for two channels as the power supply is independent.