Hey Dracule1
Never had a problem with miller effect and inductive volume controls. Mainly because with an autoformer, worst case is at full volume when the output impedance of your source drives the miller directly. As you attenuate the autoformer transforms the excess voltage into current so things just get better. I have seen situations where an autoformer actually extends the bandwidth of a device over a resistive based attenuator because of its ability to increase drive as you attenuate to better deal with things like miller and cable capacitance.
dave
Never had a problem with miller effect and inductive volume controls. Mainly because with an autoformer, worst case is at full volume when the output impedance of your source drives the miller directly. As you attenuate the autoformer transforms the excess voltage into current so things just get better. I have seen situations where an autoformer actually extends the bandwidth of a device over a resistive based attenuator because of its ability to increase drive as you attenuate to better deal with things like miller and cable capacitance.
dave