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I'd be interested in hearing more about your adventures along these lines. Looked up the EMU DAC and yes it does look interesting, certainly cheap and cheerful! Amazing really if the mic and line level pre's are as good as the general comment out there. Might be a good way to rip vinyl!Dave
Not quite sure what you're suggesting, but if soldering is a put off you're probably better off going w/ the stock PS and maybe tinker down the road. The stock kit sounds terrific as it is, and I'm sure you want everything to go right the first time...
I am not explaining myself well. What I was thinking of was starting with the stock kit and adding an outboard bank of capacitors (the aforementioned Panasonic tsha) in addition to the on-board stock caps. My thought was that one could solder on leads from the outboard bank to (perhaps) the underside of the pcb.
I was simply brainstorming.
Why? Do you really think this amp requires it? Personally, If you feel the need to upgrade the caps then do that but adding more isn't necessarily going to give you more sonic performance. I think it would be wise to put the kit together and listen to the unit first then if you still have the burning desire to DIY crazy, then have at it.
The version I auditioned was bone stock and sounded fantastic. Anand.
That kit already contains gain pots for both channels so you'll already have built in volume control.steve
They do go down to zero but as you say, replacing them with a stereo pot would be more convenient.steve
I had thought about that option, but you might want to check with Tom first. As I understand it, the purpose of those gain pots is to adjust the amp's gain to match your preamp, and not as a dedicated volume control. But what do I know?
Another question. Will the kit fit into this case? I love the case's dimensions and it is predrilled perfectly for my use.http://cgi.ebay.com/DIY-Audio-Aluminium-Chassis-Power-AMP-Metal-case-03-/160469515048?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0
I would think reducing the gain of the amplifier would have an effect of limiting dynamic range as opposed to a volume attenuator on the input. Steve