Hello Clio09,
I guess the simplest thing (if you havent tried it yet) would be to put the tube amp on the medium gain setting which is the same gain as your SS amp and just connect them to your preamp output with a Y connector, speaker cable of the tubes to the highs and SS to the lows...
How does it sound?
If they dont match...too many highs for instance try lowering the input sensitivity on the tube amp again to 0.4V setting....and viceversa.
If you need some fine tunning then use the attenuators, hereĀ“s a couple of links that can help with the instalation of these.
http://www.nutshellhifi.com/dact-apps.html
http://www.10audio.com/passive_pre.htm
Once you have a good setting with the attenuators you can put good quality resitors of the same value you settled on and just enjoy..... Audiophile accepted solution if you use Caddock or Vishay!
I am worried about biamping though since the Xover point of your speakers is pretty high, 3 Khz its like your speakers have 2 tweeters (they should be very resolving on mids), usually it is best to biamp at lower frequencies, say 100hz to 800hz, but do give it a try!!!
If you get away with it your system will have beautifull ease and power...
Cheers
I guess the simplest thing (if you havent tried it yet) would be to put the tube amp on the medium gain setting which is the same gain as your SS amp and just connect them to your preamp output with a Y connector, speaker cable of the tubes to the highs and SS to the lows...
How does it sound?
If they dont match...too many highs for instance try lowering the input sensitivity on the tube amp again to 0.4V setting....and viceversa.
If you need some fine tunning then use the attenuators, hereĀ“s a couple of links that can help with the instalation of these.
http://www.nutshellhifi.com/dact-apps.html
http://www.10audio.com/passive_pre.htm
Once you have a good setting with the attenuators you can put good quality resitors of the same value you settled on and just enjoy..... Audiophile accepted solution if you use Caddock or Vishay!
I am worried about biamping though since the Xover point of your speakers is pretty high, 3 Khz its like your speakers have 2 tweeters (they should be very resolving on mids), usually it is best to biamp at lower frequencies, say 100hz to 800hz, but do give it a try!!!
If you get away with it your system will have beautifull ease and power...
Cheers