Preamplifier power supply


Hi folks, should a preamplifier have a BIG (that is: an overkill power supply) to sound dynamic and authoritative? I'm asking this because some experts would say "yes" while others would say "no". Recently a well known audio journalist (Anthony Cordesmann?) said that the preamplifier doesn't have to have a big power supply because it doesn't have to deliver lots of energy (in the form of current). A preamplifier can sound "dynamic" even with very modest power supply --> for example the built in preamplifier in the Benchmark DAC. But some manufacturers rely on a truly overkill power supply in their reference preamplifiers: MBL, First Sound Audio, BAT, VTL, LAMM, Mark Levinson. So who is right?

Chris
dazzdax
if the preamp has a phono section yes. if not, no.
The reason is that all the signals coming into a line stage are ALREADY at a high level, and the pre is really only attenuating them, and selecting the input. Thus some use only an attenuator as a pre, or no pre at all.
On the otherhand, a pre with a phono section actually IS amplifying the signal a lot from the tiny cart output.
The only other time a big power supply in a pre might help is when a big mismatch between the impedance matching of the source to pre, or pre to amp exists. (then the hefty power might cover the problem.
Hmm, so those manufacturers are only implementing overkill power supplies for marketing purposes and the people who buying their preamps should know that they are in fact buying power supplies?

Chris
Yes you do need a good quiet power (toriodal) supply that keeps noise away from the circuitry - and big capicitance like on a big power amp is one way to do that. Of enormous criticality is how power supply is kept away from ground and how balanced the signal lines are designed with respect to ground.However, it can't be simplified to just that.

It is just as important to have features other than just a good power supply - balanced, high output levels with great channel separation and low output impedance and high input imepdance and of course low S/N. High quality tone controls with a "defeat" option for refernce. Volume control needs to be well implemented like with a discrete resistor network steps (like a crystal CS3310 or Burr Brown PGA2310) rather than just a cheap pot and wiper with continuous volume control, IMHO.