if you want to build an amp, build your own version of the Leach Amp.
https://users.ece.gatech.edu/mleach/lowtim/
I did, back in the mid-80's. My customizations included: case, protection, power supply, slow turn on (surge elimination, logarithmic ramping of audio), 1% metal film resistors, 10Turn pot for bias adjust, 4 independent supplies for amp, one for protection circuit, 40,000 uf of filtering, 19" rack, 2RU high, cap voltage ratings increased to 100 V except the main caps and no power switch) The 100 V upgrade was totally necessary. No DC protection except a super fast blow fuse (AGX series) An early version had the 50 V caps that were specified and one blew up causing the amp to be missing one supply rail. That why the shutdown was added. Power switching was handled by a triac timer.
Initial version used a single supply ferroresonant transformer rated at about 20 Amp secondary. Very nice sounding, but it hummed. The later version was four 4x35 Vrms*3A transformer (It should be larger) with an external 500 W AC sine wave voltage regulator.
It was favorably compared with a Macintosh tube amp and Klipsch speakers with horn tweeters. The horns did sound better and louder with the low wattage Mac amplifier. Bass was non existent on the Mac amp. The regulator wasn't used. I like dome tweeters. The amp is supposedly fantastic with electrostatic speakers. Bi-amped (leach for bass, tube amp for horns) would probably be fantastic.
The amp needs to be looked at in terms of what's limiting the power.
The system has a dbx 4bx dynamic range expander with "impact restoration", The latter increases the rise time of the signal source and you can adjust it so you actually hear the hammers on a piano or hammer dulcimer type of music. My friend was into classical and had a CD player with a valve front end.
The frequency response is unheard of: DC to about 800 kHz. Respectively rolled of to 0.5 Hz to 40 kHz. The slew rate is >100 V/uS. DC offset <1 mV.
Plans were to add a clipping indicator and an over-temperature indicator. The protection circuit will prevent damage when the output transistors switched places accidentally. Just one resistor fried which is supposed to fry. The protect circuit could be a little more sophisticated, so the resistor won't pop. If a rail fuse blows the current limiting resistor will pop too. There are space constraints in the design.
The optional power limiter was not used in my version.
I added a stupid headphone jack. Really the voltage gain should change when the jack is used.
I did design a really nice clipping indicator for a piece of work instrumentation though.
Servicing requires a service harness that brings a channel out of the case so you can work on it. It was fantastic in the mid-70's and it's fantastic now.