Atmasphere --
Phusis, I would guess that the reason is you have had a spat of bad luck, as your experience is one of the minority. A lot does depend on the preamp though and they are not all created equal! Some simply act as filters in the system. If you have been working with such preamps I would not doubt that you reasonably arrived at your conclusion.
Thanks for your response. I would add that not all DAC's are equally created either, and that the analog output stages here used vary (to include some that are good matches for a direct poweramp coupling) with regard to their abilities to properly drive a poweramp - something you know, of course, but a factor that needs more visibility in discussing this subject, as I see it. I'm not necessarily after simplicity per se - as in, it cannot simply overrule sonic impressions as a general principle - but I like keeping it as a mind(out-)set , even as a counterweight to conventional "wisdom" in developing a setup. Had my impressions of the DAC-direct approach, in the combinations I have tried, been less than favorable I would surely have gone back to using a hardware preamp(models from Electrocompaniet, Classé and Cary being the last ones - the latter indeed with tubes..).
Charles1dad --
Thanks for your reply. I am perfectly fine with some of us having to agree to disagree amongst a variety of taste and opinions, so this is not my dispute. I was after the subtle, back-handed notions - insofar they were directed at me, let alone that they existed at all - that I was lacking the sole experience of actually listening before forming an opinion on the related matter, a seeming prejudice against digital volume controls (speaking of actually having the experience), and that a scent of "we, the lovers of active preamps, know the sonic truth; you don't" persisted. I may have overblown the existence of all this, but truth be told there's a rather overwhelming preference for the use of an active preamp (something that can have other reasons than SQ alone), and I guess some, if not most of these haven't made extensive experiments with a DAC-direct approach; the inertia, or convention of using an active preamp is very likely a factor.
Marqmike --
Thanks for your thoughtful response. Your reference to having a history of "exposure" to live music makes for an interesting, and highly relevant backdrop with regard to "having an ear" for evaluating reproduced music, and how this relates to a more strict understanding of the term "hifi." I do not intend the walk down the absolutism-path with this (nor do I read your reply in such a way), but it is a valuable piece of information about knowing what real, live acoustic music sounds like, in a living room no less, and how this could ground some of the subjective views that "all is just as good," insofar we're actually interested in what live acoustic music sounds like, and that having the goal, or simply a natural inclination towards seeing it reproduced most faithfully has any meaning. Myself I have attended quite a lot of classical concerts, mostly symphonic scale, and more intimate jazz/club concerts as well, and through the last years has been very keen on how to recognize the signature or "pattern" of live music in optimizing my own setup - not an easy task, and one that takes some perceptive tricks to achieve, to me at least.
I think if one has an active one would probably need to do more than drop a passive in to compare. I think you really need to pick your components for a passive system to optimize it. Just like you would do with changing any component. I say that (as many here say that the pre amp has a considerable effect and change on a sound system)because I think going from a active to a passive is one of the bigger changes one would make to a system.
This is exactly one of the main points in discussing this subject. Well said.
Asa --
I know, this is hardly dispositive in an empiric sense, but I know of a guy who streams only digital into class D amps - talks a lot, doesn't listen much, cognitively chatters like a monkey - and who says that his is the most "transparent" way, it just has to be, its so, um, logical.
My response? You can't describe the color purple to a blind man...
Who're you referring to?