It most likely is attenuating the input. It depends on what sort of VC they use. If it is a ladder then wide open is best. If it is a shunt, then it doesn't matter much as there is only one resistor you are going through at any volume. It certainly won't hurt anything no matter where you set it. The Raven can drive 10K loads with ease. The advantage of the Raven will be that you can use a balanced source (XLR) as well as rca. So if you have a DAC that has XLR outs, use those. Also, you can try any amp with xlr outs because the Raven supports those. Our system is fully balanced from input of the Raven to the output of the Blackbirds. It is a truly balanced tube circuit in each.
Thanks for the input, Don. My DAC does have XLR out so these will be used, as well as balanced out of the Raven whenever possible with future amps.
As far as variable gain and VC implementaion on the AMP-23R, Enleum does not provide much detail on their website. I was able to glean a few nuggets from reviews where the designer (Soo In Chae) gave input:
Stereo Times - ..."Soo In tells me that the volume knob, by the way, is apparently (digitally) capable of something like 1024 steps but is factory limited to about 40 times fewer steps as it is not strictly a potentiometer attenuating the amplifier’s fixed gain, but rather an extension of the amp’s ‘Ensence’ PCB module whose circuitry employs discrete transistors and, is a somewhat unique way of doing things in that it dictates the setting of playback volume by direct adjustment of the amplifier’s gain rather than by attenuation of a fixed maximum gain.”
HiFi Knights - …”at its core it’s a stereo power amp controlled via a user-selectable truly variable voltage gain. Each step on its knob-coupled resistor matrix generates one fixed voltage that determines amplification factor thus signal strength instead of maxing out and then trimming its level. This route makes AMP-23R the perfect candidate for standalone preamps. It also removes resistance and losses introduced by attenuators, maintains constant SNR at all voltage values and explains why under the Enleum’s knurl we see the word gain not volume. To simplify, if the usual integrated suspects rely on volume attenuation plus two or three optional gain settings to pull desirable SPL, Soo In’s latest has 1’024 of them to do the same without attenuation.”