I find this post interesting, in that it begs the question of whether a preamp should sound like anything. I have read so many reviews (in the rags) of preamps wherein the reviewer said something like "a good preamp should sound like nothing at all" and then went on to describe the unit in their system and how it sounded. And I ignored the whole thing about the preamp sounding like "nothing", and got very interested if it was a good review. I imagined what this amazing component could do for my system (in other words, if it is truly transparent, it should do nothing for your system other than provide a good connection hub for the rest - it should add nothing). And over the years switching between different preamps I have considered them a separate component, like an amplifier or source, that should be adjudicated on its own merits of 'sound quality' -- or, what it adds. Recently I revisited the whole notion of a preamp sounding like 'nothing.' A recent review compared a preamp with a source component driving the same amplifier directly. (That didn't used to be possible, until now with the advent of digital components with adjustable volume/output). And I realized, why would you add a third component (between your source and amplifier) of variable quality, unless you really needed a traditional preamplifier because you needed a switching mechanism between numerous source components and other devices. And lots of wires. I found myself looking for a better sounding preamp, when I had what I believed was a transparent preamp (i.e., "nothing") and only one source. I think it is a trap to look at a preamp as adding something to a stereo system in terms of sound. If it is adding something, then truly something else in the chain must be lacking, no? I think unless one is connecting multiple sources, and possibly biamping from the same preamp (needing all the extra connection capability), preamps are not needed, and the paradigm of considering the additive qualities of a preamp is simply bunk. That is, only the detractive qualities (from "nothing") should be considered. And no doubt I'm rehashing something somebody else wrote here or elsewhere a long time ago...