Think I see where the confusion comes in and actually starts from my side because the word "DUMP" is what I call it since I do not know the correct wording for them and also, I am talking about "HOME" equipment and not "CAR" equipment. They do similar functions but also not. Will try and explain. Might be wrong thread for this but it is just to clear up the confusion here.
Just to assist in this explanation Copilot gave me the following:
"
Class D amplifiers are highly efficient, often exceeding 90%, resulting in lower heat generation and longer equipment life. On the other hand,
Class AB amplifiers are renowned for superior sound quality and reliability, making them favored in live sound applications despite slightly lower efficiency."
Image for explanation purposes:
(referencing to above Image) Ok so on the left (and right) we have the filter capacitors. They filter the "Noise" out of your gained frequencies. I have seen some amplifiers where they use "Dual" amplification circuits where you get less noise on output by paralleling the same circuit where after you send it to a smaller filter since your noise is a lot less.
In the middle we have what I (Personal term) call "Dump" Capacitors. You might have noticed at some concerts or shows (When a "BAD" (Lack of a better term) amplifier is used, that some instruments play louder than others E.g you have the bass pumping, but you can hardly hear a voice, or the voice is overpowering and your bass sounds distorted. Specifically, on "Sub-Bass" (20 - 60Hz). Reason for this is the voltage drawn on the system when the "SUB" kicks in and it is not the guy on the sound desk that do not know how to control his mixer and also not a badly made EDM but actually a equipment failure. When the "SUB" kicks, it draws power from your amplification circuit, resulting in loss of frequencies, usually on your higher end of the scale. Not because of a "bad" amp or a "sloppy" filter system, but because the sudden voltage drop is so much that it draws the power from your amplification circuit. If you are running a 52v amplifier this dump can drop to almost 38v. Thats why your higher end Amplifiers has multiple transformers and usually 1 per channel to avoid a too harsh voltage drop. Having a system running on almost half its originally needed power, it produces half its potential. I normally see it on the display backlights when the "Dumps" are not sufficient to carry the load. There are several ways to fix this but ultimately, we add "Dump" Capacitors to fix this problem ("The bigger the better" is not always correct here). These Capacitors charge and when the "SUB" or "Bass" comes in, the sudden draw gets drawn from the "Capacitors" and not from your circuit (Yes similar to Car Audio) This now give you the ability to run your system at Full capacity (Long periods at a time) without loss of quality or frequencies.
The adding of a larger Power supply made sense when you said it, but after thinking about it, instead of resolving the problem, you merely upped the voltage to have a higher final voltage drop, but the strain on your amplification system is still present. Means you have not fixed the origin of the problem, merely bypassed it. Obviously, this is how you blow "mosfet's" or "IC's" etc. They get extremely hot and with the dump you are basically pushing and pulling them in both direction the whole time. Somewhere along the line they snap.
The "Dump" capacitors I am referring to is for two reasons. 1. Reliability and 2. constant maximum performance.
I know my little Kenwood has them and obviously my bigger PA amplifiers has them, even my Beringer sound board has them. So from my side of the coin it seems as if I was busy comparing apples with pears. In my defence this is because I have never owned any other type of equipment hence the query about "WHERE ARE THEY?". My baby stage amplifier is 1000 watts and that is just to handle parts of the system so when I see something very pretty an awesome, I usually turn around and walk away when reading words or big prints that says "120Watt".........I own tweeters needing more than that.
Obviously still want to own a proper Valve/Tube AMP someday when I retire. The idea (mental image) and physical image just does it for me. From what I heard about the audio quality of them; I will probably give it a miss eventually. I am too used to near-perfect audio.
Hope this clears up any confusion. Sorry about that.