In order to add a bit to the road Mike went down his first audition was with two pair of identical 1:20's, one in silver and the other in copper. Initially the silver was preferred and after a few weeks he found that the internal SUT's to the CS Port offered some benefits over the 1:20's he had in system. A little bit of sleuthing turned up the distortion spec of 0.1% @ 0.76Vrms output. Working this number backwards from the 40dB of gain this translates to 7.6mV of input. The Etsuro Gold has 0.56mV of output and fed to a 1:20 that will be slightly above the 7.6mV level. It turns out that the CS Ports internal SUT had 3dB less gain which using simple math put the output right at that published distortion number which is why I suggested that mike try a 1:10. I sent him a copper 1:10 for his 4Ω Etsuro and things improved over the internal SUT. Replacing the copper with silver was the icing on the cake that he is currently consuming.
I think the important thing to note about this is the high frequency overload characteristics of phono playback is typically not pretty. At high frequencies many phono stages seem to have a more abrupt transition into distortion where the higher order artifacts show up and quickly dominate. This high order high frequency distortion only happens at dynamic peaks nearing the highest possible groove velocities. Holman notes a worst case 105cm/sec peak @ 7Khz on Woody Herman Verve V-5885 and that represents 26dB above the standard 5cm/sec velocity referenced to 1kHz. Granted the 7kHz signal receives 10.7dB less gain but that still leaves a 15dB dynamic peak above the 1kHz baseline. It is these periodic events tickling the abrupt onset of distortion that I find gives a "something is not right but I'm not sure what it is" type of feeling. It is the periodic occurrence at dynamic peaks that make it so elusive. The trend as of late is for MC carts with 6dB or more output than their predecessors which simply translates to a 6dB loss of high frequency dynamic headroom when considering a MC stage built with a 0.2mV SPU in mind. 10 years ago a 1:10 was an anomaly and today with MC outputs in the 0.5mV to 1mV range it is slowly becoming the norm.
dave
I think the important thing to note about this is the high frequency overload characteristics of phono playback is typically not pretty. At high frequencies many phono stages seem to have a more abrupt transition into distortion where the higher order artifacts show up and quickly dominate. This high order high frequency distortion only happens at dynamic peaks nearing the highest possible groove velocities. Holman notes a worst case 105cm/sec peak @ 7Khz on Woody Herman Verve V-5885 and that represents 26dB above the standard 5cm/sec velocity referenced to 1kHz. Granted the 7kHz signal receives 10.7dB less gain but that still leaves a 15dB dynamic peak above the 1kHz baseline. It is these periodic events tickling the abrupt onset of distortion that I find gives a "something is not right but I'm not sure what it is" type of feeling. It is the periodic occurrence at dynamic peaks that make it so elusive. The trend as of late is for MC carts with 6dB or more output than their predecessors which simply translates to a 6dB loss of high frequency dynamic headroom when considering a MC stage built with a 0.2mV SPU in mind. 10 years ago a 1:10 was an anomaly and today with MC outputs in the 0.5mV to 1mV range it is slowly becoming the norm.
dave