Ralph, I will ask Dave Slagle what he thinks about my setup and loading.
The original sound tradition Hashimoto hm-7 I tried had an even higher
winding ratio such as 1:30 I think. It sounded pretty amazing with 29dB
gain. But it was a little too big and "in my face." This will be 26 dB
on top of 46 dB of my linestage, which seems reasonable.
Dave didn't believe me when I commented on AudioAsylum some years back that interwinding capacitive coupling is affected by loading, and thus to get flat frequency response loading is a pretty important aspect of transformer use. He's a believer now. BTW his updates on the H/K Citation 2 are excellent.
Hang on guys, some transformers have multiple taps and others do not.
You have to check on the wires coming out of the transformer. Most are
color coded. While having multiple taps gives you flexibility. I think
but I am not entirely sure that a single ratio transformer is
theoretically better. Ralph may be able to comment on this. Sowter has
multiple tap transformers but I have always avoided them. May be just a
knee jerk assumption. My brain hates unused wires.
Multiple taps don't do anything to degrade performance, but they do allow you to use the transformer in a more flexible manner. The Jensen transformers in the OP's preamp have as commented earlier three different setups that can be used. The wires don't hang unused- they have to be connected together to form either parallel or series arrangements. This affect they way they respond to inter-winding capacitance so the loading requirements change as well.
A nice little side note: All phono cartridges are balanced sources and most of the time are run as if they are single-ended. But when you do this you wind up with that odd 'ground wire' that other single-ended sources don't seem to need. That ground wire is pin 1 of the XLR if you were running balanced. All transformers are capable or running balanced or single-ended input or output, so if you have an SUT you can run balanced from the tone arm to the transformer and single-ended from the transformer output if your phono section is single-ended. The advantage here is that the tone arm interconnect cable ceases to be as critical in the overall system sound; if you had to audition this cable to find the right one for your system you know exactly what I mean. So you can take another step closer to neutrality by doing this, although you will have to find a place to install the XLR connections to the transformers... again, a fun little fact :)