Lightspeed Attenuator - Best Preamp Ever?


The question is a bit rhetorical. No preamp is the best ever, and much depends on system context. I am starting this thread beacuase there is a lot of info on this preamp in a Music First Audio Passive...thread, an Slagle AVC Modules...thread and wanted to be sure that information on this amazing product did not get lost in those threads.

I suspect that many folks may give this preamp a try at $450, direct from Australia, so I thought it would be good for current owners and future owners to have a place to describe their experience with this preamp.

It is a passive preamp that uses light LEDs, rather than mechanical contacts, to alter resistance and thereby attenuation of the source signal. It has been extremely hot in the DIY community, since the maker of this preamp provided gernerously provided information on how to make one. The trick is that while there are few parts, getting it done right, the matching of the parts is time consuming and tricky, and to boot, most of use would solder our fingers together if we tried. At $450, don't bother. It is cased in a small chassis that is fully shielded alloy, it gets it's RF sink earth via the interconnects. Vibration doesn't come into it as there is nothing to get vibrated as it's passive, even the active led's are immune as they are gas element, no filaments. The feet I attach are soft silicon/sorbethane compound anyway just in case.

This is not audio jewelry with bling, but solidly made and there is little room (if any) for audionervosa or tweaking.

So is this the best preamp ever? It might be if you have a single source (though you could use a switch box), your source is 2v or higher, your IC from pre-amp to amp is less than 2m to keep capaitance low, your amp is 5kohm input or higher (most any tube amp), and your amp is relatively sensitive (1v input sensitivity or lower v would be just right). In other words, within a passive friendly system (you do have to give this some thought), this is the finest passive preamp I have ever heard, and I have has many ranging form resistor-based to TVCs and AVCs.

In my system, with my equipment, I think it is the best I have heard passive or active, but I lean towards prefering preamp neutrality and transparency, without loosing musicality, dynamics, or the handling of low bass and highs.

If you own one, what are your impressions versus anything you have heard?

Is it the best ever? I suspect for some it may be, and to say that for a $450 product makes it stupidgood.
pubul57
The long answer is yes, you can get a slight compression with the Lightspeed Attenuator if the input impedance of the poweramp is below the industry standard of 47k ie: 5k to 30k, because it will be being slightly loaded down.
If it is at or above 47k, the standard Lightspeed Attenuator WILL actually give 100% of the dynamics the source is producing, because there are no active components in the signal path, and it is not being loaded down.
All active components have a limit to be able to try to pass 100% of the dynamic input through their circuitry, this is why they all have specs that will never show "dynamic range"=unlimited. Or signal to noise = unlimited
Except if it is a purpose built dynamic range expander like the old DBX 118, but you would not want one of these in a high end audio setup, they sound disgusting.

Cheers George
I am a little confused - the compression is an impedance issue, not a gain issue?
Paul, think of it this way, you have 4 lanes of peak hour traffic coming into two different cities, one of the cities has a bridge that can take all 4 lanes into that city without any speed reduction to the cars,. the other one has less lanes on the bridge therefore the cars have to file over the bridge at slower speed than they approached it at.
Same thing happens to electrons,the bridge/input impedance compresses the music to get it through. This happens every where in the audio chain, from cartridge to phono stage, from phono stage to preamp, from preamp to poweramp, and the big one from poweramp to speakers.

Cheers George