Passive Pre - No Regrets?


I'm interested in hearing from folks who have moved from a high quality active preamp (I'm currently using a CAT SL1 Ulitmate)to a passive preamp and have had no regrets. I'm particularly interested in hearing from those that have switched to a Placette or Sonic Euphoria (the two I'm considering). I'm using a CAT JL2 Amp feeding Merling VSM-MX.
pubul57
Pubul57,

Wait until you get 100 hours or so on the Placette, bet things just get better and better. Take your pick as to whether passives actually "burn in" or it takes a little time to notice all the extra fine, subtle, details that get through. But, you should be able to notice things that never came through in recordigns before.

Enjoy! (and let's know how things develop)

Atmasphere: I found that the resistance of the control changes the sound A LOT, huge changes and that worries me, I have been closing in on the best value for my system and I have always been going lower, now I am using 1k, the diference from 1k to 1.2k is big, mainly the instruments get more body and weight, dynamics are also better. With 10k there was no dynamics, the snare drum didt really move me it sounded like a stick...going lower its becomes more of a drum, fuller sound and it begins to move your belly when it hits (thats what I like!!)
With my active preamp I had huge dynamics and almost no transparency loss...the passive is more transparent and I have almost huge dynamics..If I had never heard the active that way I would be very happy with my passive right now.

I am going to try a 800 ohm control and see what happens!!

I am also using AN tantalum resistors since they give out a fuller body than the caddocks or vishay I tried.

I talked to Guy from Placette and he didnt recommend a 1k attenuator, he does not make it either...so I will have to get the active Placette then! If its 20 or 30 % better more transparent and dynamic its does sound pretty good...does it come with a phono section also?
I posted my thoughts early in this thread and have been following the very constructive discussion.

i read somewhere in the thread that the power supply for the Placette passive RVC does not (or should not) benefit from a quality power cord. that was also my thought 'originally' too. but i did experiment with it and to my great surprise i did hear a bit lower noise floor with the little power supply connected to a good power cord. i don't have my RVC any more and can't remember exactly how it connects....but until you try it don't 'assume' anything.

my opinion is simply that the Placette is sooo damn transparent that any improvement jumps right out. Guy from Placette told me at one point that you can 'stack' 5 RVC's and compare them to one RVC and they sound identical. i believe it. try that with any other attenuator.
"The same with tubes..come on..I know you have a favorite type tube for your equipment... most designers do. Give up the goods!LOL"

Its true. I prefer the tubes that I do because I can get them to be neutral. How neutral? Neutral enough that the state of the art has to evolve to hear the colorations. Even then we find that changing things elsewhere (power supply, wiring, coupling caps etc.) will often deal with it (in effect we still are not hitting the limits!).

I agree that all things make a difference, and I know that creating a system around a coloration will not work in the face of creating a system around no coloration. Synergies in effect do not work.
I know that creating a system around a coloration will not work in the face of creating a system around no coloration. Synergies in effect do not work.

I agree that it is a worthwhile goal to build a component that is completly neutral (straight wire with gain) but since we are all using different speakers that in relative terms are all highly colored, couldn't you end up feeding a speaker with a completely uncolored signal and still have sound that is crap.

As long as we have highly colored speakers further complicated by room interactions, it seems we will always be tweaking the system to color it in a way that compensates for speaker and room colorations.