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Re: OT: previous post about true inexpensive tube preamps
> always was abit on the noisy side for me. From what I read the
> presonus has a circuit which feeds the tube (12ax7) a full voltage
> current and not the "starved plate" variety found in many budget range
> tube gear.
afaik the difference between a budget tube pre, and a "genuine" tube pre
is this.
The budget model uses a regular pre-amp circuit , then passes the signal
through a tube stage,
usually a 12ax7 ( in UK speak thats an ECC 83 ).
The "genuine article" uses a valve (perhaps a specially designed pentode)
to do
the pre-amplification.
I don't know how much running at low voltage (starved plate?) affects the
sound of
a valve stage, it probably reduces the signal to noise value, but that
wouldn't
be significant if the valve isn't used to do a lot of amplification. (which
in the cheap units, it isn't, it's just there to color the sound).
( and the valve will last for ever at low voltage )
Genuine valve pres are tend to be a bit on the noisy side compared to an
equivalent transistor unit.
Conclusion
A "real valve pre-amp" isn't likely to be cheap, and any sonic advantage
sends to come a the expense of a bit of extra noise.
In a budget design it's the quality of the transistor parts which is
likely to be significant.
andy butler