estreeter
Headphoneus Supremus
- Joined
- Jun 10, 2009
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Hi All,
I'm posting this here because I believe I may get more informed responses - many of you seem to have considerable experience with speaker rigs, and I expect that you have grappled with this exact issue. Steve Deckert piqued my interest by insisting that putting a preamp in the signal chain is rarely a good idea, and may actually give you worse sound than hooking your source directly to your amp. Integrated amps have a pre-amp side-by-side with the power amp, so (theoretically) they arent 'solving' the problem. Of course, his (power) amps all have volume controls ...
There are a couple of reasons why I would be hesitant to try this, but the main one is simple : fear of being instantly and permanently deafened. These are my concerns/observations:
- the line-out on some sources is fixed and on others variable : adjusting the volume pot on the source may or may not alter the strength of the signal being received by your power amp. Whatever the spec sheet says, I would hate to find out otherwise the 'hard way'
- even a passive line-stage (aka passive pre-amp, a complete oxymoron when its an attenuator not an amplifier) is still another potential gremlin in the signal path - if you can control volume at the source, do it
- active pre-amps were designed to 'fix' low output sources like phono and early CDP - anything above 2V should be sufficient to drive a power amp - I dont know how well that works in practice.
Long story short, I can paste quotes on impedance matching and various opinions, but I'm interested in hearing from Head-Fiers who have actually been there and done it.
- its interesting that every DAC manufacturer who offers a 'DAC/preamp' option charges handsomely for the addition of variable line control instead of building it into their base model DAC
- I read that Ravel's Bolero is an excellent track for assessing whether this is going to work or not, but my concern is that as soon as I hooked A to B and powered them up, the speakers would be damaged by the ensuing very loud hum of a signal with zero attenuation - anyone ?
- yes, I can get some cheapo speakers for the initial hookup, but I cant get a new pair of ears - I guess I could just connect one little speaker and see how it goes .....
- the Parasound 2125 is cheap enough that it would make a good candidate for testing without putting out 500w per channel. Have to wonder if a roadie has even been deafened at a gig setting up 1000WPC PA amps......
The obvious answer is 'stick to integrated amps, Junior, and leave power amps to real men', but I'm a curious type. Many people are still buying very expensive active preamps and the Pass Labs passive is long gone - am I missing something here ? All feedback welcome.
Cheers,
estreeter
PS the Pass Labs Aleph L tech reportedly lives on at CI .....
http://www.ciaudio.com/products/PLC1MKII
No active line stage, no matter how good it is, will ever equal the sonics of your direct connection (or an equivalent passive).
http://www.high-endaudio.com/RC-Linestages.html
I'm posting this here because I believe I may get more informed responses - many of you seem to have considerable experience with speaker rigs, and I expect that you have grappled with this exact issue. Steve Deckert piqued my interest by insisting that putting a preamp in the signal chain is rarely a good idea, and may actually give you worse sound than hooking your source directly to your amp. Integrated amps have a pre-amp side-by-side with the power amp, so (theoretically) they arent 'solving' the problem. Of course, his (power) amps all have volume controls ...
There are a couple of reasons why I would be hesitant to try this, but the main one is simple : fear of being instantly and permanently deafened. These are my concerns/observations:
- the line-out on some sources is fixed and on others variable : adjusting the volume pot on the source may or may not alter the strength of the signal being received by your power amp. Whatever the spec sheet says, I would hate to find out otherwise the 'hard way'
- even a passive line-stage (aka passive pre-amp, a complete oxymoron when its an attenuator not an amplifier) is still another potential gremlin in the signal path - if you can control volume at the source, do it
- active pre-amps were designed to 'fix' low output sources like phono and early CDP - anything above 2V should be sufficient to drive a power amp - I dont know how well that works in practice.
Long story short, I can paste quotes on impedance matching and various opinions, but I'm interested in hearing from Head-Fiers who have actually been there and done it.
- its interesting that every DAC manufacturer who offers a 'DAC/preamp' option charges handsomely for the addition of variable line control instead of building it into their base model DAC
- I read that Ravel's Bolero is an excellent track for assessing whether this is going to work or not, but my concern is that as soon as I hooked A to B and powered them up, the speakers would be damaged by the ensuing very loud hum of a signal with zero attenuation - anyone ?
- yes, I can get some cheapo speakers for the initial hookup, but I cant get a new pair of ears - I guess I could just connect one little speaker and see how it goes .....
- the Parasound 2125 is cheap enough that it would make a good candidate for testing without putting out 500w per channel. Have to wonder if a roadie has even been deafened at a gig setting up 1000WPC PA amps......
The obvious answer is 'stick to integrated amps, Junior, and leave power amps to real men', but I'm a curious type. Many people are still buying very expensive active preamps and the Pass Labs passive is long gone - am I missing something here ? All feedback welcome.
Cheers,
estreeter
PS the Pass Labs Aleph L tech reportedly lives on at CI .....
http://www.ciaudio.com/products/PLC1MKII
No active line stage, no matter how good it is, will ever equal the sonics of your direct connection (or an equivalent passive).
http://www.high-endaudio.com/RC-Linestages.html