Z.., Forgive me my horrible arithmetics, even 1:10 is good enough.
The so-far called "conditioning" of the sound might(or might not) apply to "restoring" the sound after feedback on the source components. Certainly I should've placed it in quotes since whatever is lost on the first place can never be restored and that's why many prefer to call it sound conditioning. Active preamps do not neccesarily have a gain. They can have a unity maximum gain as well or very low gain that is not able to "condition" or "restore"...
Thus it's not neccesarily that 20dB-gain preamp will sound better than 2dB.
Volume control and pre-amplification in general is one of the most vast parts in audio and it certainly equally conserns passive preamps as well.
I prefere to invest more into source components rather than spending a fortune on the true active preamp that niether colour, condition or restore the signal. That's why I use passive and probably never will go active.
The so-far called "conditioning" of the sound might(or might not) apply to "restoring" the sound after feedback on the source components. Certainly I should've placed it in quotes since whatever is lost on the first place can never be restored and that's why many prefer to call it sound conditioning. Active preamps do not neccesarily have a gain. They can have a unity maximum gain as well or very low gain that is not able to "condition" or "restore"...
Thus it's not neccesarily that 20dB-gain preamp will sound better than 2dB.
Volume control and pre-amplification in general is one of the most vast parts in audio and it certainly equally conserns passive preamps as well.
I prefere to invest more into source components rather than spending a fortune on the true active preamp that niether colour, condition or restore the signal. That's why I use passive and probably never will go active.