OpAmp as Input in Power Amplifier - exploration

You mean designs with 250 current mirrors in them? Makes sense on ICs where transistors are essentially free, and inherently matched. Not so much with packaged discretes.
thats what i want to build
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There isn’t any reason why you can’t…. There could be a list as long as your arm why you shouldn’t. But you could also claim that every one of those reasons doesn’t apply/doesn’t matter here. And you wouldn’t really be wrong.

Just determine what parts you can commit the project, and go ahead and build hardware. The costliest part of this is the case, power supply and heat sink. Which can be re-used if it doesn’t meet expectations.
 
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When you want serious power!

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Apologies if this is a basic or confusing question, but I'm having trouble understanding how the voltage of ±35V to ±80V in an amplifier circuit can be reduced to safe levels for an opamp, like the NE5534, which has a wide supply voltage range of ±3V to ±20V. Which components or part of the circuit are responsible for lowering the voltage to levels that allow the opamp to operate safely?