@mijostyn ,
Below is an excerpt from the Stereophile review you cited:
"Being a current-mode phono preamplifier—one in which a dead short takes the place of a resistive load, and current amplification takes the place of voltage amplification—the Lino C 2.0 is intended for use only with cartridges of low output and low internal impedance—the lower impedance, the better. The closer the Lino gets to seeing a short circuit, the happier it and you will be—as long as your tonearm wiring doesn’t tie chassis common ground to the cartridge’s signal leads—which means that unless you operate on it, you can’t use your Rega tonearm with the Channel D."
I was curious about the product, read the review and noticed the caveat. No need for the OP to buy something that doesn’t work with other equipment.
Best Regards,
Jim Perry
Below is an excerpt from the Stereophile review you cited:
"Being a current-mode phono preamplifier—one in which a dead short takes the place of a resistive load, and current amplification takes the place of voltage amplification—the Lino C 2.0 is intended for use only with cartridges of low output and low internal impedance—the lower impedance, the better. The closer the Lino gets to seeing a short circuit, the happier it and you will be—as long as your tonearm wiring doesn’t tie chassis common ground to the cartridge’s signal leads—which means that unless you operate on it, you can’t use your Rega tonearm with the Channel D."
I was curious about the product, read the review and noticed the caveat. No need for the OP to buy something that doesn’t work with other equipment.
Best Regards,
Jim Perry