Question on Preamp Outputs.


I was hoping that you guys can answer a question.

My preamp, a Marantz 8802a has a max output of 2.4 volts balanced output. I am looking into a McIntosh Amp that is rated for a higher input potential. I am generally pleased with my Marantz. Below are the specs pf the McIntosh and the Marantz.

McIntosh MC462
Power Output Minimum sine wave continuous average power output per channel, with both channels operating is: 450 watts into 2 ohm load 450 watts into 4 ohm load 450 watts into 8 ohm load Output Load Impedance 2, 4 or 8 ohms Rated Power Band 20Hz to 20,000Hz Total Harmonic Distortion 0.005% maximum harmonic distortion at any power level from 250 milliwatts to rated power, 20Hz to 20,000Hz Dynamic Headroom 3.0dB Frequency Response +0, -0.25dB from 20Hz to 20,000Hz +0, -3.0dB from 10Hz to 100,000Hz Input Sensitivity (for rated output) 4.2 Volts Balanced 2.1 Volts Unbalanced

Marantz 8802a
Analog Input sensitivity/Input impedance: Unbalanced RCA input:200 mV/47 kΩ/kohms Balanced XLR input:400 mV/94 kΩ/kohms Frequency response: 10 Hz – 100 kHz — +1, –3 dB (Direct mode) S/N: 105 dB (IHF–A weighted, Direct mode) Distortion: 0.005 % (20 Hz – 20 kHz) (Direct mode) Rated output: Unbalanced RCA pre-output : 1.2 V Balanced XLR pre-output: 2.4 V 0 Digital D/A output: Rated output — 2 V (at 0 dB playback) Total harmonic distortion — 0.008 % (1 kHz, at 0 dB) S/N ratio — 102 dB Dynamic range — 100 dB Digital input: Format — Digital audio interface 0 Phono equalizer Input sensitivity: 2.5 mV RIAA deviation: ±1 dB (20 Hz to 20 kHz) S/N: 74 dB (IHF-A、with 5 mV input) Rated output: 150 mV Distortion factor: 0.03 % (1 kHz, 3 V)


Since my Pre has 2.4 volts , what does that mean in the grand scheme? Aside from getting a better dedicate two channel preamp .. I know I should, but that will come later. 

Thank you In advance.
Rick
knowitall
@kijanki : you get an F! My math is correct! It is just a simple linear proportion comparing 2.4 to 4.2! And then multiplying the result by 450. You are thinking of watts -to- volts of an amp's power output. So way off the mark!
jasonbourne52  You multiply power by the ratio of voltage and that is wrong.  It is not linear problem since output power is function of input voltage squared.  For instance 1/2 of voltage = 1/4 of power.
Amazon has some adapters: GXR - 134 from zZounds for $8.65 each. However you may experience distortion when using an XLR/RCA adapter because they shunt pin 3 to ground at the unbalanced end. Pins 2 and 3 are out-of-phase signals. Some amps won't tolerate having an out-of-phase signal connected to their input ground!
I think you will really need an adapter using a transformer to avoid having pin 3 connected to the shield ground at the amp's RCA jacks.