... You're saying it happens when the output section can no longer get louder because it's gone into distortion? If that's the case then it not what i'm hearing i guess. Can i assume until the output starts to distort the NFB will remain intact? ...
Long version of what PRR said:
- NFB throws-away/uses-excess gain in the feedback loop to keep the amp clean. The amount of gain available for this purpose is the gain-difference between open-loop (no feedback) and closed-loop (with feedback) performance of the amp.
- When you play an amp with NFB and crank it until the output section finally does start distorting, you've actually slammed it hard enough to exceed the feedback's ability to keep the amp clean. So that's it, feedback done, the amp is now behaving as though there were no feedback (until the driving signal drops again).
... as i understand it, when you crank up an amp at some point the NFB starts having less effect and eventually at a high enough volume falls apart altogether. ...
The middle part of this statement is false; the effect of the feedback doesn't "fall away"... It's in full-force, or it's gone entirely because the driving signal finally overwhelmed it. In this way, feedback contributes to abrupt transition from clean to distortion, rather than a gradual change (and was a classic gripe of some in the hi-fi community; i.e. "abrupt clipping" vs "smooth overload").
... What i don't understand is whether NFB can somehow be made to last longer, IE: to a higher volume before falling apart, and if so, how.
... IS there a way to keep it from happening till a louder point?
You can cause there to be greater feedback voltage applied back at the phase inverter. You could alter resistor values in the voltage divider from speaker to phase inverter, or use a higher-impedance tap (which increases the amount of voltage before it gets divided down). If you increase the feedback too much, you risk making the amp unstable, and the "negative" feedback will become positive feedback.
Pick an amp and link its schematic; you'll need to be pointed at concrete components in the circuit to know what to change.