I cannot contribute to a technical discussion here, but can explain, anecdotally, what I have experienced in preamps and phonostages I have lived with since the early 1970's. My first serious foray into separates involved an old solid state MacIntosh preamp (I think it was a C-22) and a Dynaco 400 power amp. The amp had oodles of power at the time for driving dynamic speakers, but the preamp sounded compressed. I transitioned to a more modern solid state preamp by a 'fringe' company- Quintessence- which was more dynamic and quieter than the Mac, but had nowhere near the bloom or aliveness of the ARC SP-3, which I then switched to, along with tube amps and Quad ESLs. (Remember, we are still circa about 1974-75).
When the Sp-10 preamp was introduced, I eventually gave up my SP-3. Differences? Less euphonic, at least by comparision to the SP-10, and far more dynamic. Downsides- noise, tube anomalies, very sweet phono stage, and whatever bass or upper range limitations the preamp suffered were not readily apparent on the limited bandwidth system I was running.
Currently using a Steelhead with a Lamm L2. The Steelhead is dead quiet and hugely dynamic, but sounds a bit threadbare- I also am using the MM input rather than the transformer. With the Lamm linestage in the chain, the proceedings take on a richer, more involving, but less powerful presentation at the frequency extremes. I am probably willing to trade off some of the bandwidth for the extra life and body that the Lamm brings to the table.
With horn type speakers, I am also obviously less willing to tolerate noise.
One of the common things to both the SP-10 and the Lamm is a tubed-based power supply. I don't know if that contributes to the liveliness I like.
When the Sp-10 preamp was introduced, I eventually gave up my SP-3. Differences? Less euphonic, at least by comparision to the SP-10, and far more dynamic. Downsides- noise, tube anomalies, very sweet phono stage, and whatever bass or upper range limitations the preamp suffered were not readily apparent on the limited bandwidth system I was running.
Currently using a Steelhead with a Lamm L2. The Steelhead is dead quiet and hugely dynamic, but sounds a bit threadbare- I also am using the MM input rather than the transformer. With the Lamm linestage in the chain, the proceedings take on a richer, more involving, but less powerful presentation at the frequency extremes. I am probably willing to trade off some of the bandwidth for the extra life and body that the Lamm brings to the table.
With horn type speakers, I am also obviously less willing to tolerate noise.
One of the common things to both the SP-10 and the Lamm is a tubed-based power supply. I don't know if that contributes to the liveliness I like.