Hi Marek,
By adjusting gain, you are changing the signal level/voltage being processed by the circuitry that is at points in the signal path between the gain adjustment provision and the volume control. That can affect various kinds of distortion that may be introduced by that circuitry, and the ratio of signal to noise that is generated by or coupled into that circuitry. You are also changing the effects that the volume control mechanism and the gain adjustment provisions themselves may have on the signal.
As long as the settings you are comparing are within reasonable limits, so that the volume control is being used in a reasonable part of its range and noise levels are not objectionable, the optimal combination of settings figures to not have much predictability, and most likely has to be found experimentally, as you are doing.
Best regards,
-- Al
By adjusting gain, you are changing the signal level/voltage being processed by the circuitry that is at points in the signal path between the gain adjustment provision and the volume control. That can affect various kinds of distortion that may be introduced by that circuitry, and the ratio of signal to noise that is generated by or coupled into that circuitry. You are also changing the effects that the volume control mechanism and the gain adjustment provisions themselves may have on the signal.
As long as the settings you are comparing are within reasonable limits, so that the volume control is being used in a reasonable part of its range and noise levels are not objectionable, the optimal combination of settings figures to not have much predictability, and most likely has to be found experimentally, as you are doing.
Best regards,
-- Al