The Avastar and Fet Valve preamplifiers use different hybrid technology, based upon what was the best choice of active devices we could come up with at the time they were designed.
The AvaStar uses a dual triode voltage amplifier followed by a very fast and very low distortion solid state current amplifier (5 pin surface mount device) inside the overall feedback loop. This provides a very low output impedance and the tube operates in a very linear mode, not even needing to drive its own feedback loop. This works very very well.
The Fet Valve preamplifier uses a similar dual triode voltage amplifier, but followed by a high current, high voltage power mos-fet transistor inside the feedback loop with similar low output impedance and high drive current capability.
Although the solid state current amplifier used in the Avastar is a marvelous device, it internally contains many semiconductor junctions as compared to a single mos-fet device used in the new Fet Valve preamp. Although we cannot measure it, we suspect that the improved musicality of the Fet Valve preamp may be due to the much less complex nature of the mos-fet it uses.
Note that the Fet Valve preamp has a bit of a back to the future design aspect. We used a very similar topography with some earlier Ultra hybrid preamps, but before devices were available to make them perform as well as our current design does. A drastically better mos-fet device, additional high voltage regulated power supplies (three per audio channel - - two for each tube, plus another for the mos-fet), a better layout and other useful circuit improvements make the Fet Valve preamp the best we have done.
Note that the a very similar circuit is used in the Fet Valve 400R and 600R power amps, these amps could be considered to be Fet Valve preamps on steroids.
Frank Van Alstine