When reviewing affordable speakers, it's critical to have benchmarks and comparisons for various price points. Inexpensive speaker designs are exercises in tradeoffs and compromises, especially for the least costly products. In all of my reviews, I try to compare the speaker in question with other designs close to the review sample's price, chosen from my list of previously reviewed speakers. From time to time, if a speaker particularly impresses me, I ask the manufacturer if I can keep the speakers around a while longer, so that it can serve as a comparison reference for a certain price point. That's not to say that any speaker I <I>don't</I> keep around is less desirable—there's just not enough room in my house to keep a sample of every speaker I like. An audio reviewer's wife puts up with enough as it is.
I've greatly enjoyed John's articles about the Slim Devices SqueezeBox and am about ready to go purchase one.
As the SqueezeBox offers a volume control for all outputs, couldn't I just connect the SqueezeBox's RCA analog outputs directly to my 2 channel amplifier? Bypassing the need for a preamplifier as the SqueezeBox would be my only source? Would there be any issues with that?
I've greatly enjoyed John's articles about the Slim Devices SqueezeBox and am about ready to go purchase one.
As the SqueezeBox offers a volume control for all outputs, couldn't I just connect the SqueezeBox's RCA analog outputs directly to my 2 channel amplifier? Bypassing the need for a preamplifier as the SqueezeBox would be my only source?
Would there be any issues with that?