In the datasheet it says that Vce (sat) @ 300A is 2.5V. That's 750 Watts! That's going to be one very large heatsink.
Yeah, well, that's why it comes in a case with .06 K/W Rth-j-c. Actually, 2.5 V isn't that bad, given it's a triple darlington this implies that the emitter resistance is <1.5 m?.
2.5V less ~1V Vbe * two transistors in series leaves about 0.5V (and no more than 1.3V) for actual Vce(sat), which will be limited by the outermost transistor's saturation.
It's too bad they don't rate it for more than 10A peak base current; it's probably not painfully slow if you yank the main transistor base down with a generous current (20-100A?). But if you're going to build a driver to do that, you should've sprung for the GTO in the first place...
Also, don't be tempted by linear amplifiers either. Not only will you have a hard time finding speakers capable of handling 300V peak,
that thing will probably grenade* if you put it in the linear range very far. That is, it probably has significant 2nd breakdown limits.
*When you have 600V DC available, with enough electrolytic capacitors behind it to filter line frequency (or supplied by a 3-phase rectifier), electronics don't "release the magic smoke". They explode. That plastic shell turns to pieces. Needless to say, eye protection and a safe distance (and maybe some shields) are recommended for playing with these things. Assuming you have the 600VDC available, of course; that's very much an industrial kind of thing. But a stack of 19 golf cart batteries would be about as destructive, with the advantage of not simply burning until the breaker pops, but delivering cold cranking amps for minutes at a time.
Tim