The volume control on every system has a sweet spot or sweet zone where the music in your room to your ears sounds best. It can change slightly from recording to recording or even from genre to genre. The numbers on the dial are merely reference point so you can find that place again and are otherwise pretty meaningless.
The psychological factor
Since I got a new amplifier a while ago, I have hesitated putting the volume control on the preamp past 12 o’clock because that was never a good choice with previous amps. I was afraid I would overload the system. I now find that factor was depriving me of the best sound I could obtain.
Placing it now at 12 or above, I’m now finally enjoying what the amp is truly capable of.
I wonder if anyone else has experienced anything like that.
Placing it now at 12 or above, I’m now finally enjoying what the amp is truly capable of.
I wonder if anyone else has experienced anything like that.
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- 39 posts total
rvpiano, I have AHB2 and use it at the lowest gain settings (Pro-level) as recommended by Benchmark (with DAC3 HGC). The whole idea is to move as much gain as possible to preamp (quieter environment) from power amp (noisier environment), not to mention less (percentage wise) electrical noise pickup on ICs between the two. As for psychological factor - I like my max power to be around 2 O'Clock to be sure it will cover even very quiet records. 3 O'Clock makes me feel uneasy. |
If only there were some memorable way of showing just how irrelevant the numbers on the volume control are.... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4xgx4k83zzc |
I find 9 o’clock and 10 on my sugden class A is plenty loud driving my tannoys. This is for both cd and lp’s. To think it only has 30 watts into 8 ohms....I’d guess by the volume it is capable of putting out, it has a lot more, but most likely not. I Used to own a 100 watt rogue class D, and I still own a 90 watt marantz (now in storage), and I miss neither. |
- 39 posts total