, forget everything you understand concerning class-AB theory and star ground layout.
Really? So, for example, my ground return wire to the power supply can double as my signal ground with no ill effects??
eliminating noise with high inductance star grounding using cotton insulated pure silver wires isn't going to help when 100nH is enough to blow up your gate driver...
Inductive loops in the power switching section need to be kept minimal for obvious reasons, but the routing of the actual analogue signals still needs to follow basic (hierarchical rather than the idealised “star”) grounding rules applicable to the "optimal" implementation of any other amplifier.
What is it with audio design that so reliably brings out the evangelists with their oversimplified and dogmatic statements of "fact"?
evangelists ? oversimplified and dogmatic statements of "fact"??
dogmatic -> arrogant assertion of unproven or unprovable principles
Really now? You ask for help then you start to insult really, mature.
Let me correct your foolish response for the last time , now that I understand what your level of understanding is regarding this subject and frustration cause you cannot seem to get anything working.
A class-d amplifier is no different than a switch mode power supply or high power switching converter, one of the main differences is the modulator is made to modulate to an incoming audio signal and then based on the complexity of the modulator perform quantization and drive a pair of FETs in their non linear region, they either on or off then demodulated with a suitable low permeability magnetics, if you understood this from the very beginning you would not even start to doubt the advice that was given to you. (This is not an audio evangelists or audio-fool point of view)
As for the star grounding a class-d OR SMPS (as we in the experienced area know) carries high frequency loops, high current loops and are subjected to many many design issues (some of the important ones we spoke about, "excluding you"), good class-d PCB designs are always done with a continuous ground plane 2 layers or more, signal loops as well as high current loops need to be kept in a confined area. This is not class-ab or your breadboard understanding of star ground loop.
I recommend you start with a simple 50-watt calss-d first before undergoing such ambitious projects.