General question about tube preamps and gain


I have a (possibly moronic) question unrelated to my previous thread. This is a general question about tubes and gain.

So say you buy a tube preamp and it sounds clean and clear. You decide you want that dark, syrupy sound (classic tube sound?). So you buy tubes that impart this sound on the signal and install them.

Now installed, you notice that the more you turn the preamp volume up, the more the tubes impart that sound on the signal. But you can’t play it loud. 
So could you, theoretically, put attenuators (lets say -10db) between said preamp and the power amp to lower the output signal which you’d then turn the volume up and drive the tubes a little harder to impart more of the tube’s sound at lower levels?

I hope this makes sense. It does in my head but that don’t mean much.


gochurchgo

Showing 3 responses by tooblue

I have used attenuators (10db) between my Audible Illusions 3B and amps to allow greater range of the volume controls, my Lamm LL2.1 has a 15 db attenuator switch on the front panel that I use as well for the same reason. Enjoy the music.
@gochurchgo, you need to just leave that Quicksilver alone and let it break in till you get a couple hundred hours + on it. The builder is very conscious of the tubes he uses and the matching of them. Enjoy the music.
To answer your question, I am not sure that I am driving the tubes harder, just that with the attenuation I am getting more into the sweet spot of the volume controls. Both the pres I have seem to have benifited greatly with attenuation employed, please note both these pres have dual stepped volume controls, with that said as you add volume each step seems to be smaller allowing for closer adjustment. Hopefully someone will jump in with a better explanation than I am able to provide. Both these pres have been used with the same amps with the same results, VTL MB125s, Pass XA30.5, Canary CA306 and Quick Silver M120s all needed the attenuation.