Distortion with ARC Ref 150 and Maggie 3.7


I have this problem that drive me nuts for quite a while. I purchased a like new fully balanced ARC Ref 150 tubes amp through Audiogon for my single ended only CAT SL1 Ultimate preamp and connected both with a RCA to XLR interconnect. It sounded okay with most recording but has awful distortion with certain recording specifically piano and vocal. Some of this recording happens almost on entire record but some only on certain musical passage. Most of the time with higher pitch or peak of music or higher volume.

For your information I listen to vinyl only most of the time and more on Jazz music. Other component listed as follow:

Turntable: Sota Nova, Tonearm: Origin Live Illustrious, Cartridge: Dynavector XV1-S, Step up transformer: Bob's Device CineMag 1131 (Blue) feeding directly to CAT's own phonostage, Speaker: Magneplanar Magnepan 3.7. Power cords, ICs, Speaker cable, Autoformer: Paul Speltz Anti-Cable.

Trouble shooting which has been done includes: checking preamp tubes condition and checking power amp bias. Since ARC claims their Ref 150 was design for balanced preamp only so I also tested by replacing it with single ended tubes amp but the distortion remain. As for the cartridge I believe I have done the alignment pretty accurate with the Mint's Best Tractor but not very sure with the azimuth.

While tested with my other 2 pair of speakers, one which has higher spec show the same problem while the lower spec one seems get rid of distortion. So I suspected the issue probably was with the new Maggie. Called the dealer and he performed a test with his transistor amp with no distortion at all. So he assumed my Maggie is okay. Is it true that the Maggie only good with transistor amps?

By now it leaves me with total confusion! Sincerely hope fellow audiophile here could give me some advice and save me from this endless misery !

Thanks very much in advance!
pakwong
Great!

I don't doubt their statements about the RX vs. XX. And actually when I suggested the RX I hadn't thought of the possibility of using the XX with your existing adapter cable.

I'd expect that either approach will work well, and will solve the initial problem, but there may be some sonic differences resulting mainly from differences between the cables themselves. Which would be preferable, if in fact there is any difference, is probably unpredictable.

Regarding the slots and screws you asked about, I believe those are to provide the option of connecting via bare wire, which is sometimes done in pro applications. So you can ignore them.

Best regards,
-- Al
Hi guys, got the RX few days back. They work the same as the XX, no difference in sound quality as I use the same IC which changed to RCA plug at output end.

Anyway this unit need a few days to sound their best just like every other audio product. I would say the Jensen transformer has done a great job on converting unbalanced to balanced signal. My system sound like never before with no perceivable anomalies. The balanced signal has makes the Ref 150 unleashed it's full potential by creating a fantastic deep and spaciousness sound stage through Maggie 3.7. I would recommend this product to anyone with the same issue. You'll get good price from eBay.

Thanks all!
Updates:
About one week after using the Jensen PI-2RX, the Ref 150 fuses blow twice. The second time one of the electronic part overheated. I wrote to ARC and here what they answer:

"The overheated part is the turn-on surge resistor, R67. This is a 21.5 ohm / 25W resistor that is designed to cushion the current in-rush at cold turn-on of the REF150. The reason the resistor has overheated is there is a fault that is preventing the RY1 AC power relay from closing after about 1.5 seconds and bypassing this resistor. If the AC relay does not close, R67 will very quickly overheat, as it is not meant to be in-circuit for more than a few seconds. A schematic is attached. Have your technician troubleshoot the soft-start circuit to determine the fault. Note that in 220-240VAC models, this resistor is 21.5 ohms, not the 5 ohms shown on the schematic."

I was asking is this cause by the transformer or due to tubes problem (power tubes about to change) but ARC didn't give any answer.

In the mean time, I got a copy of CAT SL1 Ultimate manual and noticed that there was some instruction on how to connect the preamp properly to a balanced amp as follow:

"When using amplifiers with balanced inputs, the negative leg of the balanced input should be shorted to ground. This prevents hum and noise problems caused by the floating inputs. While most amplifiers with balanced inputs provide a switch for this purpose, inserting a jumper in the XLR connector will accomplish the task. Alternately, an XLR connector can be prepared with this jumper soldered internally, and the connector then inserted into the XLR jack."

If the CAT's wired method for the RCA to XLR cable really works, I think perhaps it's better to stick to the conversion interconnect cable.

Any advice?

Thanks in advance!