• WARNING: Tube/Valve amplifiers use potentially LETHAL HIGH VOLTAGES.
    Building, troubleshooting and testing of these amplifiers should only be
    performed by someone who is thoroughly familiar with
    the safety precautions around high voltages.

Remote volume control of valve amp

Not necessarily. A stepped attenuator or relay-based attenuator would be examples of mechanical volume controls that won't degrade anything. I've also never measured any degradation from an Alps RK271-series "Blue Velvet" pot aside from maybe 0.1-0.2 dB channel imbalance.

Tom
 
I would just build a stand alone remote controlled attenuator in a small plastic box.

Plastic boxes can have the holes made with a soldering iron.

The last stand alone volume control I made was for a radio executive. I did use a motor controlled volume control. There was a small timer circuit included to turn the volume all the way down about once a day.

Really worked wonders once a few of his coworkers mentioned they thought they had seen someone in his office at night, but when they looked closer there was no one there.

Haunted office!

But what happens to the sound quality using such an attenuator?
 
From my experience, keep these things in a separate box. I have two Millett engineer amps, one with a Broskie selector/attenuator in front of it. Guess which part started to scratch when switching, despite good quality components...

It was painfull to dismount it to use Deoxit and then let dry and remount. My next amps will be without any such parts. Pots, switches and motors should stay out of amps... ok that's my opinion and others will disagree.

In the process I discovered that the hex screws locking the selector buttons use 1/16" Allen keys.... boys, when will you stop using these weird norms and adopt metric size ??? In wood construction I can understand, but in mechanic thats plain dumb. 2nd lesson of the day: 1.5mm allen key destroy 1/16 screws...

Ok i should stop winning and enjoy X-Mas 😉
😉
 
I know this can be done with a stepper motor, control boards and code but I don't have the skills to put this together.

Does anyone know of a solution which doesn't need a lot of prior knowledge?
I had an exactly same problem. Most of DIY or valve amplifier does not have a remote volume control. Family on the couch (including me) is lazy 🙂 Every kit i found is somewhat out of my taste. So I built my own. RCA in and RCA out. Chose the remote I liked with not so many buttons and built something based on arduino platform. Implemented three extra toggling relay channels for like DAC (mine DAC Magic has no remote) or like LED strip lights.
Remote i chose and liked is inexpensive aluminum from AUNE. All cheap plastic ones i dont like. : https://www.aune-store.com/en/aune-remote-aluminium-for-flamingo_110303_1179/
And the board with studio grade ALPS Blue Beauty motorised potentiometer looks like this:

volume.jpg


Will be working on an enclosure soon. Just the idea for apparently a common problem. Maybe should sell it on Esty 😀
 
Very long ago, LP record era, I worked for a guy (unmarried) who had a Thorens TD-125 deck with a Rabco arm, everything manual, and needed to be able to stop the noise at the end of the groove in times of romantic entanglement. He rigged a suitable length of plastic tubing such that he could give a quick puff at his end, and the air pressure at the turntable end pushed the power switch. Claimed it worked fine.

Makes me wonder if remote controls really need to be electronic and IR, etc. Concentric steel cables, maybe like those made for motorcycle controls, could be grafted onto the existing Volume knob, with another knob on the user end. Twisty slop can be overcome the same way motorcycle throttles do it, converting rotation into linear push-pull and back again.

Low tech but not low fi,
Chris
 
I have a valve amp (Acoustic Masterpiece) with, obviously, no remote control. I'm using the remote volume control of my network streamer (Marantz ND8006). This is not optimal because the variable output of the streamer is nowhere as good as the fixed output. I would dearly love a way of remote-controlling the volume of the amp so that I can switch to fixed output on the streamer.

I know this can be done with a stepper motor, control boards and code but I don't have the skills to put this together.

Does anyone know of a solution which doesn't need a lot of prior knowledge?
I would be glad to help You out I have been doing my own remotes for several years, I even program my own chips.
I even build my own handhelds.
 

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