Ideal Volume level


I've heard that preamps work best when the volume is set higher, and also that if you turn the volume past 12 o'clock you will destroy something...

This last comment seems to be too general, since the gain of the preamp will have a lot to do with this.

Here's why I am asking; most of the preamps I've owned had a gain of 20db, and the volume knob seldom reached the 10 o'clock position. Now I have a preamp with a gain of 11.5 db, and with some recordings I find myself listening at 12'oclock or a bit higher. Everything sound fine, no distortion at all, and the amp is far from clipping (I think). But, should I be concerned???

Here's the gear in case it helps:
Pre: Audio research SP16L with 11.5 db gain
Amp: Belles 350a ref with input sensitivity of 1.98V (500 WPC at 4 ohms)
Speakers: 4 ohms and 86DB
CDP puts out 0-2.2 V

Thanks for helping :)
htrookie

Showing 2 responses by sugarbrie

There is no magic "o clock". All volume circuits would have to be identical in all gear. Actually, everyone would have to have identical systems.

At what volume your speakers perform best is a more likely determinant.

Same for your amplifier's output.
You need to think of volume in reverse. If you bypassed the volume control you would get loud full blast unrestricted sound. A lot of people would assume no sound. When you have no sound coming out, the volume control is actually on full. All a volume control does is attenuates the output of the preamp.

Everything is system dependent. The person who wants to have crystal clear blasted rock and roll is not going to build the same system as the person who wants crystal clear jazz played softly as background music.