Separate preamps and power amps have a certain cache that dates back to the days when tube equipment was the only amplification option.
The stuff was big and heavy, especially so as an amp's wattage rating increased. A higher power integrated amp could quickly become too big and heavy to be practical as consumer gear.
There was also the issue of the high power components on the same chassis interfering with the small signals handled by the pre-amp (especially the phono section).
The ultimate expression was a separate preamp and two monoblock power amps.
In the 1950s and 60s, tube integrated amps were typically limited to lower power units. (The classic integrated Dynaco SCA-35 was 17 tube watts a channel.)
These days, especially with class-D amplification, weight and chassis size are no longer an issue for high power integrated amps. There are some who would argue that the improved signal isolation of a separate chassis for each section is still worth it, but even modern integrated gear is incredibly quiet.
However, if nothing else, the cache of "separates" remains a good selling point for high-end gear.
The stuff was big and heavy, especially so as an amp's wattage rating increased. A higher power integrated amp could quickly become too big and heavy to be practical as consumer gear.
There was also the issue of the high power components on the same chassis interfering with the small signals handled by the pre-amp (especially the phono section).
The ultimate expression was a separate preamp and two monoblock power amps.
In the 1950s and 60s, tube integrated amps were typically limited to lower power units. (The classic integrated Dynaco SCA-35 was 17 tube watts a channel.)
These days, especially with class-D amplification, weight and chassis size are no longer an issue for high power integrated amps. There are some who would argue that the improved signal isolation of a separate chassis for each section is still worth it, but even modern integrated gear is incredibly quiet.
However, if nothing else, the cache of "separates" remains a good selling point for high-end gear.