High vs low internal impedance cartridges....Is there a sonic signature for each type?


Is there a general sonic signature associated with cartridges that have either very low internal impedances, like the Air Tight PC-1 Supreme at 1 ohm vs those with high internal impedances , say around 40 ohm’s?
Of course each cartidge manufacturer tends to have a house sound, Koetsu- rich and midrange centric or LYRA-fast, detailed and neutral....., but that aside, does the internal impedance of the cartridge at either ends of the spectrum lend to a sonic signature as well?
jim94025
Also most of cheap aircores or in other words coreless coils are bass shy...

@bukanova
Very interesting comment, i blamed my phono stages because with all of them (high gain MC or MM+SUT), except just one phono stage with build-in SUTs, my Air Core FR-7fz is a bit "bass shy".

I noticed it depends mostly on phono stage, because in my situation all cartridges are "bass shy" with the same phono stages. And same cartridges have better bass definition with one phono stage i like the most.

air core is bass shy by nature although masters found the ways to compensate that. Ikeda used plastic cube to wind a coils in order to get more homogenous magnetic field and more bass. Friend of mine changed permanent magnets into field coil only due to lack of bass in his air core designs. Aircore isn't the design which is intended to be bass heavy although you can hear bass details  in the music.
Dave Slagle, one of the two brains behind EMIA, has converted a few MCs to "field coil" types, using the Denon DL103, for one example.  I have heard that cartridge at the Capital Audio Fest, in the context of a truly fantastic direct-drive double Quad 57 system, that Dave also designed.  It's hard to tell what makes that overall system so great, but for sure the field coil mod to the Denon seems to be part of the explanation, because I have never heard a DL103 sound so good.  (Chakster, the DL103 may have been re-tipped with an exotic stylus; I have no idea what stylus it bears.) 

I definitely have preferred MCs with low internal impedance vs those with high.  I wanted to point out that this question is really only pertinent to MCs, because MI and MM types are some of my favorites even over LOMCs, despite having relatively high internal impedance/resistance.  I agree most with Nandric's breakdown of the issues that might make low impedance MCs sound best.  Also, besides a "coreless coil" (don't know of any examples of such a type), one might wonder about the Audio Technica ART7, which uses an amorphous core, still has excellent bass response but very low output due to inefficiency of an amorphous core.
Coreless coil the most known example is Denon DL304

and if to speak about mainstream flagman AT-ART1000

Although it’s important to define what does it mean low ohm - to me it’s up to 5 ohms...
in most old SUT’s it’s marked the same, most of them "low " means up to 3 ohms like mine FR XF-1 type L
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