Wow this threads been active since I went on an outback holiday to the deserts of Australia for the last week.
As for some of the questions asked.
When the power is disconnected from the Lightspeed Attenuator both the series and shunt ldr's go high in resistance to around a few megohms they never go open circuit, so even with power disconnected they still allow some small amount of signal to pass through.
As for never being able to go to zero volume, most do not find this a problem as if they want zero they can mute,pause, or stop the source with the remote.
If the source is vinyl the gain of phono stages are quite small compared to a cdp and is never a problem either but a very small signal can be heard through the speaker if next to them.
Saying this if someone has one of the many clones getting around, most use the NSL32SR3 led/ldr combo, these do not go as low in volume as the NSL32SR2S that is used in the Lightspeed Attenuator because the minimum resistance is higher on the NSL32SR3, and cannot be shunted to ground as well as the NSL32SR2S.
Also some clones are using the MkI Lightspeed circuit which I first used 25 years ago, which has one a fixed value resitor for the series component and a ldr for the the shunt component, these are far cheaper and easier to make but are quite high in volume at minimum and also don't sound as good because of wildly differening I/O impedances.
Cheers George
As for some of the questions asked.
When the power is disconnected from the Lightspeed Attenuator both the series and shunt ldr's go high in resistance to around a few megohms they never go open circuit, so even with power disconnected they still allow some small amount of signal to pass through.
As for never being able to go to zero volume, most do not find this a problem as if they want zero they can mute,pause, or stop the source with the remote.
If the source is vinyl the gain of phono stages are quite small compared to a cdp and is never a problem either but a very small signal can be heard through the speaker if next to them.
Saying this if someone has one of the many clones getting around, most use the NSL32SR3 led/ldr combo, these do not go as low in volume as the NSL32SR2S that is used in the Lightspeed Attenuator because the minimum resistance is higher on the NSL32SR3, and cannot be shunted to ground as well as the NSL32SR2S.
Also some clones are using the MkI Lightspeed circuit which I first used 25 years ago, which has one a fixed value resitor for the series component and a ldr for the the shunt component, these are far cheaper and easier to make but are quite high in volume at minimum and also don't sound as good because of wildly differening I/O impedances.
Cheers George