So, a Raven has landed for a spin in my rack.
Yes, it was a departure from my original post and what I was initially looking for but the more I studied it, the more it sounded like what I needed.
I have around 50 hours on it and some initial tube rolling, it is a significant improvement to my system. I will probably post my opinion over in the spatial circle for those interested.

Looks very nice! Congrats! I can't tell what the Raven is resting on, but something I'll suggest for your consideration is to place it on some good footers to attenuate the impact of vibration (from your room acoustics) on it. Source components e.g. preamps, phono stages, and DACs, in particular, are
very suspectible to the influence/impact of vibration on the component. The physics behind this is that when your speakers pressurize the room, this energy couples to the walls, which then couples to the floor* and the floor imparts vibration to the component resting on the rack. I'll just add that drywall, which most homes are constructed from, resonates at 70 Hz (!). The impact of this vibration has an clearly audible impact on the audio quality from a loudspeaker-based system. I'm confident that Danny would confirm this fact, as well.
The best footers I've found are EVPs from A/V Roomservice. The graphic in this PDF from A/V Roomservice depicts this very clearly. This image shows is really happening in folk's rooms (and homes, for that matter)
https://avroomservice.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/EVP-Fun-Facts.pdfLink to EVPs here:
https://avroomservice.com/evp-2/ Just order the density that for the weight of your new preamp.
You'd only need to get 3, and place them in a tripod arrangement (you can't rock a tripod, which another advantage of using only 3)
You could also consider from Orea footers from IsoAcoustics. At the very least, place it on some Tenderfoot footers from Herbie's Audio Labs:
https://herbiesaudiolab.com/products/tenderfoot?variant=12643255353399Just a suggestion for your consideration. Cheers.
*-Lots of folks think that if they have their system and speakers resting on a concrete slab floor, that it's not susceptible to the impact of ringing/vibration. This is, in fact, completely incorrect and inaccurate. At a specific resonant frequency, concrete actually
rings like a bell. This is just the physics of material sciences and acoustics. Cheers.