Just to emphasis a valid point already made twice, with a passive preamp you're just throwing some of the signal away (letting it go to ground without going through the power amp) and throwing less of it away, or even none of it, can't possibly be a bad thing. In a series stepped attenuator, a high setting puts the "hot" signal through less solder joints than a lower setting, but does the opposite with the part of the signal that's getting thrown away. So maybe a higher setting is better, though I don't know enough to say. Moral: don't use a series stepped attenuator in a passive: it saves money but hurts transparency and detail badly, in comparison with a ladder type stepped attenuator or a shunt type. IMHO.
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- 7 posts total
- 7 posts total