Phono Preamp Tube Rush


Is there such a thing as a tube phono stage that doesn't have tube rush? Is it just an inherent weakness of that type of pre or is it some combination of cartridge gain and preamp gain? I went from a silent solid state ASR Basis Exclusive to a Herron VTPH-2A (new home with space limitations) and now I'm using a Hagerman Trumpet with my Decca London Super Gold. Both the Herron and Hagerman have tube rush. The Hagerman beats the Herron in my setup and it really sounds incredible but in quiet passages and between songs, there's that hiss at high-medium and high volume. It's just there. No combination of new tubes, new cables, etc changes this fact. Same with the Herron. Anyone having a different experience with a tube phono preamp?
dhcod
Agree completely with the several posts above this one.  I do find the science and psychology of my own perception interesting.  

@lewm   Agreed, that being honest with ourselves is not always the easy path.  I'd rather be happy than right.  Open-mindedness and honesty takes one far in this hobby I'm finding - or in life for that matter.
I change something and if in a couple weeks i want to go to bed at night instead of listening, the change was bad.
dammmmmm audiophiles!!!!!. Please take this out of my mind.

I didn’t know about this, have never heard it, and now it is in my mind that I just haven’t been paying attention. I’ll listen tonight, better not hear anything.

I had my new dual arm tt CRANKED last night. 3 guitarists, Euryhmics, Michael Jackson Thriller, test record musical/imaging tracks, Stereo, Mono, ....

I heard some static between tracks, nothing else. I gotta get a fresh copy of that Eurythmics album, perhaps Valentine’s Day.

Fisher 80Z Mono Blocks; Fisher 500C; Fisher 800 (500c + am); now wonderful McIntosh mx110z (2 MM Phono inputs); My friends never push their system like I do, their speakers are not as efficient as mine, over 100db/1w/1m.
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Is this perhaps related to volume factors?

1. efficient speakers get loud before excess power needed by inefficient speakers, thus the ’rush’ doesn’t occur. Inefficient speakers get you into the 'rush' zone.

2. Low Output MC Cartridges, require more volume than MM cartridges that I use.

3. the combination of inefficient speakers and low output cartridges.

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@elliottbnewcombjr
The "rush" sound from your source components renders roughly the same on both efficient and inefficient speakers - because your efficient speakers are equally sensitive to both the noise to the signal (i.e. signal-to-noise ratio unaffected by speaker efficiency), and you simply set your volume control to the desired signal level (i.e. lower volume to compensate) - the ratio does not change.

With very low output MC cartridges you are reducing the signal without reducing your system’s noise floor (especially that before the volume control, i.e. phono stage), hence the issue - you have to raise the volume to hear same signal level, and thus you relatively amplify the phono stage’s noise level for the same signal level. The ratio gets worse as you go to lower output cartridges. Here is where SUTs can help - to raise your signal without raising noise (ground hums notwithstanding).

With very very efficient speakers as yours, you do have to become concerned about the inherent noise floor of your preamp and amp - i.e. the active gain stages AFTER the volume control. Especially the preamp, since its residual noise is un-attenuated, and amplified by the amp. Preamps that are dead quiet in normal systems may be quite noisy in yours! Generally you try to avoid high gain components with efficient speakers (mine Tannoys are an honest 96dB), but not all high gain components are equal - my ARC Ref 6 preamp has a demonstrably much lower noise floor than other tube preamps at roughly the same gain level (14 dB). It is dead quiet! Very impressive.