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Yes, Minidsp has low input impedance (6k I believe), I don't think that rules out tubes but it bears noting ( I dont know the output impedance of the Quickie).Ambitious, but but may be too many eggs in one basket. Especially when it comes time to troubleshoot
I've thought about the miniDIGI but to be honest, I really don't know what it is/does. It appears from the website that it can input digital and output either digital our analog; the digital to analog part I've got, but I'm not really understanding why you'd want digital in, digital out.
The pre out is split with one output going to Quicksilver monos with a passive HPF for the mid-highs. The other output goes to a miniDSP for woofer and sub XO and EQ.
My $.02 is to keep the miniDSP out of the high pass signal circuit by running parrallel outputs from your preamp, one to a line level high pass (simple to design and can be put right into the gain stage of your tube amp) that goes to the tube amp and then one to the miniDSP. Why convert to digital to convert back if not necessary? source > DAC > pre > LLXO > tubelab Simple SE > miniDSP > bass amp One additional note, if the miniDSP's Zin is indeed 6K, you could add a MOSFET source follower to the low freq output which would keep it out of the high pass signal path but still buffer the preamp.
How do you design a LLXO?
Footnote 7: To calculate the approximate -3dB point for a first-order filter like this, use the formula f = 1/(2PiRC), where Pi = 3.142, C is the value of the series capacitor in farads, and R is the combined resistance in ohms of the amplifier's input resistance and the shunt resistor used. For the example CG gives: a 15k resistor in parallel with a 51k resistor gives a combined resistance of 11.6k ohms; the capacitor has a value of 0.1 x 10E-6 farads; the formula predicts a -3dB point of 137.1Hz.—John Atkinson
Why convert to digital to convert back if not necessary?
I'm a little confused on impedance matching/gain structure stuff so I'm not fully grasping your comment about "getting the levels right." Can you elaborate a little?
I am doing almost exactly what bigjppop wants to do and I'm doing it the way Josh described. I have three analog sources: phono pre, cd player, and squeezebox. The sources go to a Bottlehead Quickie preamp built into a chassis and powered by regulated SLA batteries. The pre out is split with one output going to Quicksilver monos with a passive HPF for the mid-highs. The other output goes to a miniDSP for woofer and sub XO and EQ.I think the main difference with my setup is I chose to battery power the cd player and squeezebox and transformer couple their analog outputs rather than go with a DAC. Between all the battery supplies and tube amps, it's a lot of power switches to turn on and off. But when I hear all this cheap gear giving me close to SOTA transparency, dynamics and resolution, it takes me to a happy place.Russ
With a digital device (any digital device) in the chain you have a hard limit on the signal level at that point. In the case of the miniDSP that's 0.9v. This is fine if your amplification after the miniDSP has enough gain to get the needed output levels. So that's one thing. The other is that if you have very different gains on one output channel vs another then you will need to attenuate one or the other. This can be done digitally but at some point it would be better to optimize it with some attenuation on the high-sensitivity channel.I think you'll find it's not a terribly complicated problem once you've tried a few things. It's just something that needs to be kept in mind.
To get the second output on your Quickie, did you jut parallel a second set of outputs and then put the LLXO on one of them?
Also, are you doing battery power on your miniDSP as well?
It's not transparent enough to my ear to do full range.