What's the best approach to add Headphone Amp?


I have a wonderful 2 Ch system consisting of Audio Research CD7, Ref 3, VM220 Monoblocs and Wilson Sophias.
I'd like to add a great headphone amp as well for the times the rest of the house is asleep. My CD7 has both balanced and single ended outputs, with the balanced output connecting to the Ref 3. Should I use the tape out from the Ref 3 preamp to connect to the headphone amp, or is it preferable to use the RCA output from the CD7 while the preamp is off? Does anyone actually have experience with this scenario? Using the Ref 3 provides input switching, but also adds a lot of additional circuitry when compred with a straight run from the CD player to the headphone amp.....Suggestions appreciated.
jdolgin

Showing 3 responses by marakanetz

To my understanding to reach the best performance running directly from the source to the headphone amplifier you should find one with balanced input and balanced bypass so you use fully balanced signal path among your components, but running as you've stated AT THE SAME TIME... isn't a problem.
Grace Design M902 that had been already mentioned is one of the best contenders. You might even want to use it as a preamp vs. the one you currently have.
It depends on the input sensitivity of the headphone amplifier and certainly the sensitivity of headphones.
I use Consonance M20 headphone amp connected to the preamp's tape output driving AKG K701. I found it more refined and controlled than directly from the CD player. In addition I have analogue rig with most of M- records in my vinyl collection that do not produce clicks pops even through the headphones.
To be quite frankly, I would look for better driver than I currently have in the future, but I bet it will still stand great against any speakers.
I'd look for more bass that probably would never get with tubes and aim to some better deals on Grace Design M902 headphone amp.
Roole,
Yes speakers can interact with especially open air headphones but technically nothing wrong.
DJs use monitor headphones simultaneously with speakers at the party
A mute switch is very convenient otherwise you don't need to keep your power amplifier on.