Thank you for your explanation. I do know about this kind of stuff, but to my ears the clipping sounds not very analog. Additionally I was wondering why it occurs in the preamp/mixer section of the A4 and not in the output stage of the A4 as I can decrease the main output and it still clips.
I am not complaining about the distortion that is introduced when the amp drives into the filter. This is completely different story as it introduces musical distortion rather than hard clipping. Same for the overdrive.
I have lots of other analog gear which does clip. I think a synth/instrument should not introduce any clipping at all regardless of the parameter you choose. If it clips the amplification section is poorly designed.
I would like to ask again:
Can you guys confirm exactly this kind of clipping as I had in my video on your machines?
Does the Analog Keys behaves the similar?
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No worries
I did not mean any disrespect, but I’ve found it safe to assume that people have no knowledge when troubleshooting issues, so that no stone is left unturned 
In your particular case, and watching your video again, the main culprit is filter 2 resonance. It’s pretty much at its max, which is an EXTREME setting, and therefore, WILL produce extreme results, including distortion before hitting the Amp.
Suggesting that the amp section is poorly designed is simply ludicrous, however. Let’s talk extremes, then. Let’s do a 4 voice chord, each voice playing 2 osc’s and 2 sub osc’s. That’s a 16 oscillator stack. Now let’s increase every osc level to its max, which will, by design, already clip the mixer. Then, let’s boost filter 2 resonance to the max, on all voices. Let’s sweep the filter 2 frequency and find a nice, low end value (maybe between 50 and 200 hz).
Now, you have 16 oscillators playing together with a massive (massive) boost at a frequency. Do you expect this to NOT clip the Amp ? How would one design an Amp that can take in SO MUCH volume without clipping ? And if such an Amp, with such headroom, was designed and implemented in the A4, can you imagine how 1 oscillator on its own would sound through said Amp ? It would sound weak and quiet. In fact, one single osc in the A4 already sounds really weak and quiet, a testament to the massive headroom already available in the mixer section.
And to answer your question, yes, I can easily reproduce this behavior, I can even make it worse by cranking the overdrive on all 4 voices. Sometimes, it’s what I’m looking for, sometimes, it’s not. If it’s not, then I can always turn down individual osc levels, no problems here.
Elektron have always provided extreme ranges on most parameters, i’m happy they do. But, as a result, you can quite easily blow speakers, distort the hell out of something (MD delay with max feedback anyone ? talk about distortion !!!), or make yourself deaf. This is not a flaw but a design decision, there’s nothing “wrong” with the scenario you’re experiencing, it’s expected, easily reproduced, and easily avoided behaviour 
Cheers !