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I haven't had listening time with all of those listed, but Bottlehead gear has never done me wrong
No, but I've heard a couple FP 2's...owned one for a little while and heard a few others.I ended up with the ARC SP9-MKII I have now just because of the deal I got on it and it has a decent phono preamp built in, which I really couldn't say no to
I love my DIYhifi Django TVC. I don't know if that is the one you are referring to though. Mine is the older unit with S&B transformers and the wooden face plate. I see that they have improved the casework and added remote control now . . . . . . . .oooooooh. Must - control - credit card......... must - not - upgrade . . . . . . yet! Seriously though, if you have enough system gain and semi-efficient speakers, you ought to consider a passive transformer volume control. You will hear so much detail and character revealed when you eliminate the unnecessary circuitry of an active preamp. I know guys that have active preamps with 10 dB pads on the inputs and they still have their volume control at 8 or 9 o'clock ------------------- and it's loud! I don't get it. On the other hand, there are those systems that need a preamp with a lot of gain or the whole thing falls apart. I understand that.Candidates for a passive TVC would be those that have some or all of these conditions :1. You listen mostly to music from of a CD player (or DAC), or other strong line level device such as tuner. If you do listen to vinyl, you have a robust stand alone phono stage. 2. You usually find yourself with the volume control just barely up and the music is already very loud3. Your amp puts out full power with 1V input (or less)4. You have speakers that are reasonably efficient5. All of your equipment is close together and you don't need long interconnects. (1 meter max from source to TVC, up to 2 meters from TVC to amp(s).Don't know if that helps with your question but I had fun writing it.
Quiet,I'm with you on the passive route. But there is one more factor to consider before going passive. That's impedance matching. High output impedance (much north of 1,000 ohms) from sources need taming in order to get the best bass and an overall open sound.Several well respected integrated amps are nothing more than power amps with volume control and source switching added. And vendors like Dusty Vawter from Channel Islands Audio primarily sells passive for all these reasons.All this assumes that we're speaking of someone who wants fidelity to the recording, not colored/favored sound that tube lovers especially are fond of.
..... there is one more factor to consider before going passive. That's impedance matching. High output impedance (much north of 1,000 ohms) from sources need taming in order to get the best bass and an overall open sound.
I'm just looking at the tube preamp thing because for some reason, gotta turn the volume up to about 2 o'clock which is louder than I want to really enjoy the music. This could be a speaker issue. plus, my amp has a feedback circuit where it likes to see a certain range of impedances.