• 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.

Volume controls, impedance, Gain & help :-)

Hi,

I am trying help a friend cut down the gain of an old Valve Power amp and a very high gain valve pre amp. He does not want to change anything in the amplifiers if he can help it. Through experience using his preamplifier feeding an integrated - so effectively balancing his valve preamp gain with the integrated gain he found a good balance.

I said I would help making him a voltage divider / single step attenuator so that he can have the equivalent to a passive stepped attenuator at a single step to drop down the output of the valve preamp to the valve power amp in his system. This will sit in between the Valve pre and the valve power amplifiers.

His valve pre amp has an output impedance of 1k, and his power amp has input of 100k. So I was thinking making the RT of the voltage divider 10-20K?

Thoughts welcome
 
Yeah, that's a classic case of way too much gain and speakers that are far too sensitive.

You have 26dB of gain in the preamp and 32dB of gain in the amp.

Let's say you have a DAC with 2V of output and your speakers can use a peak of 10W, that means 13dB of gain between your source and speakers is sufficient. I would look for a small integrated amp with ~15dB of gain, or you could put a 45dB pad between amp and preamp.

The AR preamp should cope just fine with a 10K load.
 
There's a -12dB low-gain switch on the SP10, FWIW.

45dB pad seems extreme, but I can certainly see 20dB loss between preamp and power amp; trial/error may be the best guide.

(A 15k:8 transformer off the SP10 output *may* drive a speaker well, leaving the D125 unemployed.)
 
With pre Zout=1k and 40k to ground the circuit interface is fine (ca 2,5% voltage loss). Next you have to consider the input impedance at 20KHz of the connecting stage, which is (with 1k+7,5k and some added parasitic capacitance) also fine.