Would it not depend on the frequency response of your speakers in your listening room with your tastes for sound in mind?
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- 16 posts total
No. The reason the sound changes is due to distortion- LOMC cartridges and the tonearm cable together form an electrical resonance that generates Radio Frequency Interference which is injected directly into the phono section and can cause distortion. The loading resistor detunes the electrical resonance, thus eliminating the RFI. However if your preamp was designed by someone that knows about this phenomena, you'll find that the highest load impedance (47,000 Ohms) is the right one, with little or no effect at lower resistances other than the tracking ability is reduced. |
@atmasphere does that mean we can just select the load with an o-scope? |
It would be better to use a distortion analyzer, but this would only be of benefit if the phono section can't deal with the RFI on its own. If the phono section does deal with the RFI properly, you'll see no benefit from the loading in terms of distortion. |
@atmasphere thanks Ralph - what would the distortion look like? IMD, noise, or HD. Asking because I can digitise the TT signal, and look at it spectrally and do some math on it. Just need to know what to look for… (Like everything other than the specific test record tone freq?) |
- 16 posts total