I posted the following over at head-fi, but this is probably a more appropriate venue...
I've been contemplating ditching the Crack's volume pot and using an external passive attenuator (Bottlehead Submissive or the Tortuga LDR). As a trial, I've been doing this with another preamp I have on hand by simply cranking the Crack's volume all the way up to effectively bypass the pot (zero resistance in the signal path) and use my preamp for volume control instead. However, I've noticed some rising static/noise as I reach the very end of the Crack's volume knob travel.
I live about a mile from 13,500 watt radio tower transmitting 6 different stations' signals. This has caused problems for me with other headphones/amps (most notably the Schiit Fulla/AKG K7XX combo) in which I've been able to actually "tune in" a station well enough to hear it depending on how I arrange the cords and tilt my head.
My theory... based my limited knowledge and some white papers I read at aikenamps.com... cranking the volume all the way up drops the "grid stopper" resistance (the resistance of the pot that is in series with the 12AU7) to zero. Since grid stoppers "act as a very high frequency low-pass filter," I'm basically opening my Crack up to RFI (wait, that sounds bad).
Do I have these concepts correct?
The long and short of it... are there ideal resistor values for the input voltage divider when using the Crack amp sans volume control? I've seen it recommended elsewhere here that a simple 100k grid-to-ground resistor is all that's needed (no series grid stopper after the grid-to-ground resistor). But is this the ideal situation? Or is mine a unique situation that requires a grid stopper resistor?
Thanks.