Sorry if I wasn't clear on my first post. I typed it out really fast this morning as not to be late for work. Its no excuse, of course, but its true. All I really meant to say was that if the phono stage was being overloaded, whatever the cause, and there was audible distortion, you would hear that distortion whatever volume the line stage (LS25) was set to; low or high.
If we look at this piece of the OP:
"Because I was coming in from a under-gain situation, I started with the Whest set to 66dB, thinking a bit more is good, and I could just turn the volume knob lower on the LS25. But there was that record pop / loud static discharge sound which was actually cartridge gain overload. When I changed the gain settings to 60dB, the problem ceased.
My question is, why does this happen? Whats wrong with an extra 6dB from the phonostage and just a little less output from the linestage to compensate? In my mind, that seems like it would work fine. "
Thats the question I was trying to answer. When I read that, it seems to me that the OP didn't understand why the distortion didn't go away when he turned down the volume on his LS25. Whatever is causing the excess gain issue with his phono preamp, has to be dealt with there. The LS25 has nothing to do with the problem. Actually, any preamp you insert into that system should show the same results. (That is if I'm reading the problem correctly. If not, have no fear. I'm sure Al will chime in and post me back into place.)
If we look at this piece of the OP:
"Because I was coming in from a under-gain situation, I started with the Whest set to 66dB, thinking a bit more is good, and I could just turn the volume knob lower on the LS25. But there was that record pop / loud static discharge sound which was actually cartridge gain overload. When I changed the gain settings to 60dB, the problem ceased.
My question is, why does this happen? Whats wrong with an extra 6dB from the phonostage and just a little less output from the linestage to compensate? In my mind, that seems like it would work fine. "
Thats the question I was trying to answer. When I read that, it seems to me that the OP didn't understand why the distortion didn't go away when he turned down the volume on his LS25. Whatever is causing the excess gain issue with his phono preamp, has to be dealt with there. The LS25 has nothing to do with the problem. Actually, any preamp you insert into that system should show the same results. (That is if I'm reading the problem correctly. If not, have no fear. I'm sure Al will chime in and post me back into place.)