Parasound's Hint 6's new volume control provides huge sonic advances?


Promotional language for the (relatively) new HINT 6 says this: "New Burr-Brown Volume Control:
The Parasound HINT 6 is packed full of technical advancements. The new, upgraded volume control replaces the original model's motorized potentiometer and sliding mechanical contacts with a Burr-Brown electronically controlled analog resistor ladder volume control. Technical advancements in the new volume control offer a more distinct sound stage by increasing the dynamic range, lowering the noise floor, improving left-right separation and maintaining absolute left-right channel tracking at any volume level."

I'm not a skeptic, but am trying to learn.

QUESTION: How does a volume control affect so many elements important to the sound?

I almost never look to the details of how an amplifier's volume control is designed. Is it this important?
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I appreciate learning that, and it will be interesting to see whether this feature is really an advance
It’s about as much as a sonic improvement over say, the likes of an Alps Blue Velvet (-80db channel balance) as a Dact series/shunt switched resistor volume control is.
http://www.dact.com/html/attenuators.html

Nothing to write home about Burson Audio been using them for ages.
https://www.ti.com/lit/ds/symlink/pga2310.pdf?ts=1601877853848&ref_url=https%253A%252F%252Fwww.google.com%252F

Cheers George
A volume control is a voltage divider. To achieve this the sensitive signal must pass through either resistors or transformer windings. There will be two voltage dividers, one for each channel. It’s essential that these dividers achieve the same result for each channel, as the volume is varied, in order to maintain a good centred image. It is also essential that they don’t affect the signal in any way as they’re varied, ie, the sound quality is exactly the same at really low levels as at higher levels.
 If the voltage divider is a potentiometer, then the material the resistive track is made from will effect the sound quality and the two resistive tracks must match exactly. If the divider is switched resistors, this gives the opportunity to use more precise channel matching, and ‘better sounding’ resistors. If the divider is windings on a transformer, you avoid resistors all together and can achieve perfect channel matching. The only other approach, and the best I’ve yet heard, is how Lyngdorf do it, which is not to vary the music signal itself, but to vary the PSU voltage to the output driver stage.
In order of sound quality from poor to best, its Potentiometer, Switched attenuators, transformer and finally Lyngdorf’s approach.
As the volume control quality improves, the sound stage becomes more stable, sound quality more consistent from low volume to high and transparency improves.
@richtruss Thanks for that explanation -- belongs in a textbook, it's so clear! I see the kind of difference better now, and over the other range of methods. If I were comparing other options and price ranges of integrateds, I might look to see how they differed in this regard, though I still don't know the degree to which improvements in volume control  (from model to model) would matter (to my ears, at least) compared to other design elements contributing to the sound. 
Interesting thread, I do volume control completely in the digital domain which of these methods covers that?
Ha! Got me 🙂 None, I was just referring to analogue, but Digital would of course avoid these issues, like the Lyngdorf approach, as it’s not hitting on the analogue signal.