Do Audiophiles usually keep the gain of the digital source at around 80%?


My setup is:

A8 Eversolor DAC and streamer

McIntosh C12000 preamp

REL sub 810

Focal Sopra n1 speakers. 

861 Moon amp

I keep my McIntosh preamp usually between 50-60% volume. Any higher would make the sound thin like.

For the Eversolo streamer (which I am enjoying quite a bit for the money), I keep between 75% -85% max gain. With older songs that are recorded at lower volume, I have it at 85%. But with songs that are recorded louders (mostly newer songs) it would cause some/slight clipping at that level so I to have lower the gain to about 75% max gain.  

I saw that there was a max volume throughput option on the Eversolo, but when I try that I can’t really get the system as loud as I want it without clipping and distortion setting in early. 

Is this normal for Audiophiles to keep the gain on the digital signal about 80%?

Wasn’t sure if this should go into digital forums or preamps since both are used here, so I posted here. 

 

dman777

Showing 3 responses by antigrunge2

In most instances the DAC has sufficient gain and sufficiently low impedance to drive the power amp through a pot. InnuOS has the server recommended at 100% which has nothing to do with the question. It is the DAC’s output section that matters. BTW: absent serious but rare impedance mismatches all that a pre adds is more distortion/ colouring.

@devin666 

Care to offer a texhnical explanation? Is the pre inventing stuff that wasn’t transferred from the DAC? My argument is based on the fact that at a given output voltage and impedance of the DAC all you need is an attenuator. Any additional circuit will by definition add distortion or additional noise components.

If the dac has a proper quality attenuator rather than adjusting volume in the digital domain there is nothing to be gained from a pre unless it has digital input substituting for the entire analogue stage of the Dac. I have yet to hear a non impedance based argument to the contrary and impedance is a non issue in 90%+ of all cases