Need advice replacing my preamp


I have a Modwright LS100. Very nice but not balanced and I have long RCA's so they pick up noise. I am considering 2 preamps. Kindly share your knowledge/experience and advise what you think is better. BTW I will be mating this with a Wells Audio Inamorata power amp. The 2 preamps in question are the BAT vk42se or PS Audio BHK Signature Pre. Thanks.
jimbones

Showing 3 responses by atmasphere

When i tested Atma-Pre-amp to a SET amplifier Cables made a diffrent.
Balanced and single-ended operation are mutually incompatible- its either one or the other. Single-ended systems are sensitive to the cable- that's always going to happen!
'my' personal experience running 100% true differentially balanced systems is that "I" have heard the difference between 0.5M XLRs and 1.0M XLRs from the SAME company: Eichmann Express Copper. Now that was ~ 10 years ago but I never tried it with other XLR cables
@tweak1 @jimbones  If the equipment does not support the standard, you'll be hearing differences between cables. That is also why you see so much disagreement about the value of balanced operation.
FWIW most high end audio preamps, even though actually balanced, don't support the balanced standard, known as AES48. AES48 prevents ground loops from making buzz, and prevents interconnect cables from having artifact (if you've ever heard differences between two cables that's what I'm talking about). This also means you can run the interconnect cables longer distances without a downside, and the cables don't have to be expensive to sound as good as the most expensive cables out there. Imagine spending the money for a balanced preamp and then finding out that its sensitive to long interconnect cables! That really shouldn't happen.


I run 30 feet of interconnect cable between my amps and preamp and it probably cost about $300 or so for the pair. So balanced operation is a nice benefit on this account alone.


If the preamp has a pair of coupling capacitors at the output, it doesn't support the standard. This is because the kind of circuitry that needs a coupling capacitor isn't able to tick the boxes (in a nutshell, its relying on a ground connection to complete the circuit, and balanced operation ignores ground entirely). The preamp will have either an output transformer for driving the balanced line, or it will have a direct-coupled output.