Can I connect DAC directly to amp?


I am rebuilding my system into a computer-based system. I'm looking to get a Music Hall DAC. Can I run that directly to an amplifier or will I need a preamp as well?
hu11
I have hegel hd11 but as you said full signal to amp,
I would like to control that, I lower amp volume, but I would like too control it before.
My preamp is down for repair,so I ran my system as follows;power
amp/DAC(without volume control)/MF-V-Link/IMac/Audirvana ,with volume
control The results were very good! First time I have heard my poweramp
without the preamp.I was pleasantly surprised that it sounded as good as it did.I
still prefer the sound with the preamp(bass was a tiny bit better without pre). I
like what the tube pre does with the midrange,and I have multiple sources.If you
run straight in,make sure the volume is not maxed before you send music to
poweramp.
If you use JRiver, you can use the volume control in the server running on your PC. The less attenuation you need the better this works. Give it a try. Less sensitive speakers requiring less attenuation at the source would be a plus.
Hu11,

It depends on the DAC - some have gain control and some have passive or active preamps. I used the Antelope Audio Zodiac Gold as a preamp during the 2011 RMAF show, in between the phono (analog) and digital (mac/USB) inputs and the Earo active speakers. I think that it sounded fabulous.

There are other excellent DACs that will allow you to do the same thing.
In general, volume control in the analog domain is considered preferable to volume control done digitally. Less loss of information that way, especially where a lot of attenuation is used.

I just grabbed a DSPeaker Dual Core that has analog volume control with 1 analog, 1 toslink and 1 USB input. But what makes it amazing is the DSP (digital signal processing). Comes with a mic and will automatically calibrate for your room and speakers from 20-500Hz. It also has balance control, a digital parametric EQ and can compensate for timing delays from different speakers & subs to your listening position. Whoa. Kal Rubinson reviewed it in Nov's Stereophile and Robert Greene gave it an award in TAS (review forthcoming). Note though that the controls are via remote only. But pretty damn awesome.