Unity Gain Preamp [message #9870] |
Sat, 16 December 2006 04:06 |
FredT
Messages: 704 Registered: May 2009
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Illuminati (1st Degree) |
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What the audio world needs is a unity gain active preamp:) With most of the high gain amps out there, especially with high sensitivity speakers, the typcial 20dB gain tube preamp is too noisy, and the volume control never gets turned above the first 1/4 of its range. A passive preamp is one solution, and I have been using one some time, but I prefer the sound of an active tube preamp over a passive. So here's what I was thinking. I can get the LS29 tube buffer already assembled from Diyclub BIZ in Hong Kong for $40 plus $15 air post shipping. Mated with a Goldpoint attenuator I can have the best of passive and active for about $200 (including the required 12 volt transformer). If I want to go really first class I can order DIY's $40 A28A preamp case and have a "high end" appearance too. Any flaws in this thinking?
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Re: Unity Gain Preamp [message #9876 is a reply to message #9871] |
Tue, 26 December 2006 18:20 |
bretldwig
Messages: 4 Registered: May 2009
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Esquire |
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Depending on what you are using to drive the amp with in the first place, but usually a second box and another set of cables is the wrong answer. NO preamp is usually the ultimate preamp. Generally today, 95% of people spend 95% of their time listening to CD players, universal disk players, or DACs. That unit should be capable of driving any reasonable amp and should have a volume control onboard that is easy to use. Bringing in another box is not the fix. Replace or modify one or the other.
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Re: Unity Gain Preamp [message #9887 is a reply to message #9870] |
Sat, 06 January 2007 19:03 |
PakProtector
Messages: 935 Registered: May 2009
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Illuminati (2nd Degree) |
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Hey-Hey!!!, While it doesn't look like anything's wrong, you should be able to do a whole lot better for a bit less. Go +120 and -25 for your supply. Rig a pentode as the cathode follower. 6EJ7 perhaps? 6AC7? 12HL7? Resistive drop for the g2 and cap bypass to the cathode. 2-4 uF should do it. Rig a CCS for the load, and cap couple the output. The tubes are cheap, and voltages will allow easy Schottky diode rectifiers. you could buy it...but I suspect you'd rather listen to your own creation. cheers, Douglas or look in the projects folder in GroupBuild, I put a schematic there for a buffer pre...:) TX coupled and no caps in the output. The Ni-cored output TX's are -1 dB at 2 MHz!
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