Hi Tim,
I would recommend against the CJ if you need to run a sub from it, in addition to the main power amp. Not because of the need for a splitter, but because of the impedance issues that are involved.
From John Atkinson's measurements:
That same issue would potentially exist, btw, even with preamps providing two sets of outputs, if their output impedance rises to high values at any frequency. In most such designs the two pairs of output jacks are simply jumpered together inside the rear panel, which from the standpoint of impedance compatibility is no different than using a splitter on a single pair of jacks.
Regarding the other candidates you mentioned, I can vouch for the Classe CP-60 as being an excellent performer, certainly in the price range they sell for these days. I purchased one here in 2008 for $1350 (the line-stage only version), and used it happily until a couple of years ago when I replaced it with a far more expensive DEQX HDP-5 (which provides myriad signal processing and room correction functions in addition to serving as a preamp).
Best of luck. Regards,
-- Al
I would recommend against the CJ if you need to run a sub from it, in addition to the main power amp. Not because of the need for a splitter, but because of the impedance issues that are involved.
From John Atkinson's measurements:
The output impedance was quite low across most of the audioband, at 72 ohms at 20kHz, and a little higher, 183 ohms, at 1kHz. The source impedance rose to a high 1.5k ohms at 20Hz, however, which will result in prematurely rolled-off low frequencies with a power amp having an input impedance much below 20k ohms.My perception is that most powered subs have line-level input impedances of between 5K and 20K. And paralleling that impedance with the input impedance of your power amp would reduce the overall load impedance seen by the preamp considerably further.
That same issue would potentially exist, btw, even with preamps providing two sets of outputs, if their output impedance rises to high values at any frequency. In most such designs the two pairs of output jacks are simply jumpered together inside the rear panel, which from the standpoint of impedance compatibility is no different than using a splitter on a single pair of jacks.
Regarding the other candidates you mentioned, I can vouch for the Classe CP-60 as being an excellent performer, certainly in the price range they sell for these days. I purchased one here in 2008 for $1350 (the line-stage only version), and used it happily until a couple of years ago when I replaced it with a far more expensive DEQX HDP-5 (which provides myriad signal processing and room correction functions in addition to serving as a preamp).
Best of luck. Regards,
-- Al