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...Regarding output level, the original dAck! was set at 0.7VRMS (2V peak-to-peak). This was the standard for phono preamplifiers and is what most volume potentiometers are designed for. They sound more linear, have less noise, and have better channel matching at higher settings than lower ones. The high-output option yields 2VRMS (~5V peak-to-peak, 4 is a typo, sorry), which is the standard for digital electronics nowadays. It can help systems with passive volume controls that can use the extra 7dB to play louder. But in most systems the best performance and least noise generated at the volume pot will be found with the standard 0.7VRMS. ...
Doug, Home audio is actually largely standard-less, but in general sources nowadays have been popping up with higher output because the noise levels are very high in digital audio. However, a lot of high-end audio has some catching up to do - the vast majority of preamplifiers have an older industry standard of relatively high gain because vinyl sources had lower output. Thus about 90% of products out there now sound loud by the 9 o'clock setting and the signal is attenuated by a great deal - what that ...
Hrmmm... this message ended up being longer than I expected . I hope it is educational - let me know if you need clarification