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ZMA volume control (Read 9857 times)
Matchstikman
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ZMA volume control
11/23/16 at 04:09:03
 
So, if the ZMA is best without a preamp, how is the volume controlled?  Is it a passive pre or is the amp at full power and the volume control just some kind of resistor?
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Archie
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Re: ZMA volume control
Reply #1 - 11/23/16 at 16:50:13
 
Not sure if this is what you are asking but the ZMA has its own volume pot at the front, like Steve's other amps.
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ZLC
Technics 1200G TT w/ Ortofon Jubilee MC cart
ZMC1
ZP3 (25th A Mods)
ZR2 (25th A Mods)
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ZMA (25th A mods)
Homemade Big Betsy Speakers (F15s)
Silver Cabling
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Matchstikman
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Re: ZMA volume control
Reply #2 - 11/23/16 at 17:36:19
 
Archie, I understand it has a volume pot, but does it control some kind of passive pre or is it just a resistor controlling how much power is used?  I think it is just resistor.  I'm curious how it works.  Does anyone out there have a ZMA without volume control?
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Archie
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Re: ZMA volume control
Reply #3 - 11/23/16 at 18:09:59
 
I thought it might not be that simple.

There is one Forum member and ZMA owner who extensively modified his ZMA, including bypassing the volume pot by hardwiring at full output.  I think his handle is Vykong.
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ZLC
Technics 1200G TT w/ Ortofon Jubilee MC cart
ZMC1
ZP3 (25th A Mods)
ZR2 (25th A Mods)
CSP3 (25th A mods)
ZMA (25th A mods)
Homemade Big Betsy Speakers (F15s)
Silver Cabling
DIY Isolation platforms under amps & TT.
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Matchstikman
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Re: ZMA volume control
Reply #4 - 11/23/16 at 19:19:35
 
I could not find a person named Vykong.

Can you ever order the ZMA wihtout a volume control?
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will
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Re: ZMA volume control
Reply #5 - 11/23/16 at 20:47:08
 
Match,

The member's name is vyokyong. Here is the Thread:

https://www.decware.com/cgi-bin/yabb22/YaBB.pl?num=1409130590

He has a pre he really likes to control volume with, using the traditional preamp way, so got rid of the extra wire and volume control in the ZMA signal path.

I think the ZMA is built the same as most of the dual mono/integrated amps Steve makes, with one volume pot (short for potentiometer) controlling both channels...or a stepped attenuator if you choose it.

Also, that a ZMA, or any other amp with a volume pot, is better or worse with a pre, is a matter of the sound and capabilities of the front end before the amp, or the exact pre used and how it is cabled and set up, opinion, tastes and sound desires, etc, etc....too many variables to say. With a volume in an amp, seems many who are not specifically using preamps are using the digital or analog "pre" in their DACs, or a Zbit, or something else to adjust the front end sound/voltage to preferred sound levels with the amp.
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All Modified: Balanced Transformer-DIY Strip/Shunyata Defender-RevolutionMacMini/Amarra-KTE Singxer/Gustardx20pro-ZBIT-CSP3-OldChen 300B/845, Torii IV, Simple Wave 300B-HR1/SVS Micro3000sub-Pi PCs-DIY PCs, ICs, USB, I2S, Speaker-SR and aluminum w ball bearing feet
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Matchstikman
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Re: ZMA volume control
Reply #6 - 11/23/16 at 21:01:41
 
I'm dense, so bare with me.
In essence, the volume pot in a ZMA is more or less the same as a volume pot on a guitar.  It just controls how much signal goes to the amp.  Wide open all goes through, right?

So, if you had a DAC with a volume control you could easily live with a ZMA created without a volume control, right?  If you didn't have a DAC with a volume control then you'd need a pre of some kind to control the amount of signal.

I think I've seen this kind of thing on Conrad-Johnson amps, like th CAV-45.

So, with a ZMA, no pre makes for a cleaner signal.
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will
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Re: ZMA volume control
Reply #7 - 11/23/16 at 23:25:14
 
I think these ideas are right. If the volume on the ZMA is wide open, it is not being adjusted by the pot, so is like no pot volume-wise. Then by losing the wires and pot, there is less in the signal path, so cleaner.

It occurs to me that one consideration here is voicing. If Steve designs it with the wires and pots for that convenience, with minimal signal loss by short path design, good materials, etc...And since these elements are part of the "voicing" of the amp...By removing them, the sound will be more "purist." But if you loved the sound as designed, by removing, or "improving" some parts to make it cleaner, there would be the possibility that the sound change could feel a little too clean?

For example, I have the CSP3 setup with my Torii as one, compensating for the longer signal path with specifically chosen "cleaner" tubes, cables, fuses, feet, etc to make the whole sound "transparent."  It is not strictly as transparent as it would be with no CSP3, but due to the cleaner compensations, it would likely be too clean as setup now with the Torii only. And I would lose the OTL qualities of the CSP3 and gain riding....adjustment I do to alter signal density based upon recording quality....one way, leaner, and the other denser, easily fine tuning for taste for each recording. And gain riding for the most part requires a volume on the amp and pre.

So if the ZMA sounds "right" to Steve as designed, "purifying" some of the signal path might skew the amp some toward cleaner than Steve might have chosen for production. May not be better or worse, but different, and then the taste thing.

If a DAC has a pre, it can be in effect like a separate pre. Then it depends on the pre circuit quality and sound as to whether or not it might sound best or not...including better or worse than the ZMA volume pot circuit.

Technically, the ZMA with no pre would be a cleaner signal because there is less for the signal to travel through. Any wires, resistors, caps, etc that the signal travels through effect the signal...but then the question becomes: what is the end result of a signal modifier? And how transparently does it modify the signal?

In the case of the Zstage, CSP3....or Zbit, (volume adjustment abilities of the first two aside), how they are built and how we set them, changes the signal on purpose. There is inherently some loss due to a more complex signal path from parts in the units and added ICs....and some gain due to running the signal through the tubes or transformers designed to "improve" sound quality, part of which being, making the output voltage adjustable....allowing our adjustment of signal density.

At the same time, many with this level of gear purposefully "calm down" their systems a bit here and there with ICs, tube, feet....choices with sound signatures that are not the purest, but create the most pleasing sound to the individual in an individual system and room. And some purists have limitations created by less-than pure system/room anomalies (known or unknown) that cause them to need to stay as clean as possible. Likely room for most, but also using ICs, transports, power cables, DACs, feet, caps, resistors, speaker cables, etc that may not allow the purity of their amps or front ends, or whatever to be fully revealed.

Especially any part of the front end can limit the potential of a whole system. But also, one set of ICs can be limiting from the IC onward, effecting the "purity" of the whole....one tube.....the purity of power and power treatment feeding gear...power cords....vibration or low quality vibration "adjustments"....lots of ways to never get all the purity potential that is already available from the best aspects of our systems and rooms without mods.

That said, I personally am pretty deeply into modding to taste, purity and completeness of natural sound qualities primary players in this... Cool
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All Modified: Balanced Transformer-DIY Strip/Shunyata Defender-RevolutionMacMini/Amarra-KTE Singxer/Gustardx20pro-ZBIT-CSP3-OldChen 300B/845, Torii IV, Simple Wave 300B-HR1/SVS Micro3000sub-Pi PCs-DIY PCs, ICs, USB, I2S, Speaker-SR and aluminum w ball bearing feet
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Archie
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Posts: 2731
Re: ZMA volume control
Reply #8 - 11/24/16 at 01:13:41
 
Quote:
Can you ever order the ZMA without a volume control?


I have a CSP3 feeding my ZMA.  Originally Steve suggested that I use the Master control on the CSP3 to adjust volume while keeping the ZMA at full volume.  Under this condition I would think doing away with he ZMA volume pot would be fine.  However, more recently, I've been setting my CSP3 and adjusting volume with the ZMA.  I much prefer the sound I get this way but wouldn't have known if I didn't have the ZMA volume at all.  Personally, I like the flexibility of having two controls.
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ZLC
Technics 1200G TT w/ Ortofon Jubilee MC cart
ZMC1
ZP3 (25th A Mods)
ZR2 (25th A Mods)
CSP3 (25th A mods)
ZMA (25th A mods)
Homemade Big Betsy Speakers (F15s)
Silver Cabling
DIY Isolation platforms under amps & TT.
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Matchstikman
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Posts: 759
Re: ZMA volume control
Reply #9 - 11/24/16 at 03:24:48
 
Wow.  There are so many ways to enjoy music.
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stellablues
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Re: ZMA volume control
Reply #10 - 07/18/18 at 01:32:53
 
Does anyone have the details on how to safely remove the volume knob from the circuit? how do I get this?

regards
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