Solid State pre amp / tube amp


Most times you see and hear of tube preamps being used with Solid stated amps. What would using a solid state pre amp with a tube amp accomplish? Can anyone have any experience or theories as to what doing this could do both good and bad? I’d really appreciate it
bear1971
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Yea they do it all the time. A little passive SS pre or even a well built active and a good valve amp. HEAVEN!! I have a MX120 that is actually a stereo preamp with a MAC surround system ADDED. Two separate systems, with common outputs.

With any of my valve amps, it is pure magic. I paid 700.00 for that Mac. It is a TURE diamond in the rough for SQ and stereo playback.. After that it changed. The AV units were built different.. C45 is another great analog stereo/analog multi speaker units that has world class Mac sound.. NO not all Macs are created equal either. NOT EVEN CLOSE! Those two, look out..

The older C11, C20, C22, MX110z, a class of their own, when redone right..

Regards
very common solution for many excellent systems

component synergy is the lifeblood of outstanding hifi systems making beautiful music
All depends on your speakers. If you have fairly efficient speakers and enjoy buying power tubes then no problem. Tube amps are great but there is cost of running them and most don’t play well with some speakers. Cost wise for most it’s better to run a tube preamp with a SS amp. I feel in general there’s a bigger sound difference between preamps, so buy the best preamp you can and spend what you can on an amp. Tube amps tend to cost more per watt, and in some cases it can cost more to re-tube an amp than the value of the amp on the used market. Again, I say a lot has to do with the speakers you own and your budget.