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Let me get this straight -- you're saying that LDR-based volume controls appear to sound better due to increased distortion???? Wow -- I didn't know more distortion sounds better than less distortion. I had it backwards.
Well, I'll assume you're not being sarcastic, but yep, welcome to the world of high-end audio where higher distortion can sound better. Vacuum tube amplifier manufacturers have known for years that increased levels of distortion....of the proper type....can make things sound really good. These might be devices that perform horribly on the test bench with high levels of even-order distortion, yet they sound just fine.Our ears/brain is an amazing audio processor.Cheers,Dave.
Everything is relative. If you have replaced a piece of crap with a LDR based attenuator you may hear an improvement. Likewise if you replace an inferior preamp with an optocoupler with a buffered output you may hear an improvement. However if you have a minimalist buffer/preamp as I do these things are counter-indicated. In my case my preamp has 5 parts in the signal path, one of them is a 15 amp pass transistor.The rest of the parts are passive and include a DACT attenuator at the front of the circuit. The preamp/buffer will pass a 1MHz square-wave perfectly from input to output and even cleans up the leading edge of the square-wave because it will drive the input of the oscilloscope better than the output of signal generator. This indicates that the device has at least a 10MHz bandwidth as it will pass the 1MHz square-wave in an unaltered form. The THD+noise is 0.002% for 2 volts output. It would be the height of folly to put something with more circuit complexity and an inferior power supply in place of the DACT attenuator and expect a superior outcome. No thank-you.Scotty
What's the "article of faith"?
That the objective metric,THD, negatively correlates to the subjective measure of sound quality.
With the Warpspeed, my ears don't hear less distortion relative to the other preamps I've owned. Whether the measurements prove otherwise is irrelevant.
Some of you guys are passing judgment on LDR attenuators based on a single spec, which we all know tells you almost nothing about how it sounds. I've owned several active preamps, a Placette RVC, and a Promitheus TVC. The Warpspeed blows all of them away in every conceivable category. The thread is about "hearing a volume control," not measuring one. With the Warpspeed, my ears don't hear less distortion relative to the other preamps I've owned. Whether the measurements prove otherwise is irrelevant.
I found the clarity and dynamics were an immediate improvement over volume pots. I wouldn't go back at this point...although I think if I had to, I would go the stepped attenuator route with high quality resistors.