Who is using passive preamps and why?


Seldom has there been any discussions on passive preamps in the forums and although my experience with them has been limited I have found them so far to be very enjoyable and refreshingly different. They seem to fall into their own category, somewhere between solid state and tube. Finding a preamp that is satisfing has been difficult. Some active solid state preamps can be very good but they seem to inject grain to some degree in the upper registers and some tube preamps are not too far behind. So far I think they should at least be matched up with an amp that has sufficient gain which is often overlooked. Which passives are you using and with what amp? Why do you like them?
phd
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There is at leat one fella that designs a passive preamp around his amps, Roger Modjeski if Music Reference - a "simple" resistor-based attenuator - of course it is house with an active phono stage. He is adamant about the superiority of a passive linestage, which get's my attention knowing is perfectly capable of designing any kind of premaplification he wants. I still use an active preamp with his amps though....
I remember Mr McCormack saying his amps were designed with a high input impedance so they would work well with passive and tube preamps. After talking with him several time about preamps I got the feeling he prefers the sound of passives, though he will tell you there is a difference in the way the two present the sound. Its just a matter of how you like your sound (do you prefer your coffee with creme or without). I was at that point at one time, I liked the slam or greater impact in the bass region that his active offered but I also liked the openness that the passive had. The Ultra upgrade to my TLC gave me both, at first I thought it was the buffered output but then I remembered trying that before the mod and it wasn't the same.

Phd, I have no intention on selling any of my gear I've worked to hard and sacrificed to much to get where I am with it today. Plus I like the flexibility I have with the McCormack gear in my two channel/Home theater setup.

I would like to apologize to everyone one for the bad grammar in my earlier post, I thought I read through it better. I promise no more drinking and posting. The good thing is I don't have to worry about he telephone polls jumping out in front of my words. LOL

Great conversation everyone and Happy Listening.
Now I read my post, and I wasn't even drinking. Next Agon upgrade -- spell checking.
Pubul57, I don't have any direct experience with attenuators (though have done quite a bit of research on them). I have a long tome audiophile friend who has helped me for many years suggesting and auditioning gear. We have listened to alot of music together, live and recorded, and, not only do I trust his ears, but he has guided me a great deal into trusting mine. He uses attenuators - and has had the Ayre KXR, ARC Ref 5, Lamms, etc. While he says the preamps are excellent, and urged me to audition them, he uses attenuators (he only cares about sound, not how great expensive gear looks in his racks, convenience, etc). I was considering passives as my CD player was overloading my active preamp, but when I experienced the sound of my CD player direct into the amps, I just cannot believe adding any component (+ cables, etc) into that signal chain could possibly be an improvement. My decision based solely on how incredible it curently sounds and basic electronic theory. I feel the least manipulation of an audio signal, the best. While a passive would not necessarilly manipulate (definately not amplify, which usualy always distorts)the signal, it does add cables, etc (either transformers, resistors, etc) into that signal chain (and must be compatable with the rest of the gear in the chain). My turntable/preamp and my SqueezeBox/Dac still go into my active preamp - they did not sound as good direct into my amp (actually an external crossover) so definately compatability issues there. The CD player & crossover just seem to match perfectly. I really urge everyone with a CD player (or DAC) with a volume control to try the direct connection. You may be as surprised (actually, I was floored) as I was, and stil am. If I did not have volume capabilities on my crossover, I would already have a passive in my system.