Lots of good points have been made above. I would particularly emphasize three of them, and add a fourth.
1)
2)
3)As was noted you apparently have no means of adjusting headphone volume.
4)After looking at the manual for the preamp I can't tell for sure whether or not the tape outputs are driven by a buffer stage which isolates them from the main signal path. Many and perhaps most preamps do not provide a separate buffer stage for their tape outputs, although I suspect after looking at the manual that yours does. If it does not, however, I wouldn't be surprised if applying the 32 ohm impedance of the headphones to the tape outputs adversely affects the sound you hear through your speakers (just while the headphones are connected, of course; I would not expect any damage to occur, that might affect sonics when they are not connected).
A dedicated headphone amp, connected to the tape outputs, would resolve all of those issues.
Regards,
-- Al
1)
02-10-14: DoggiehowserTo add some quantitative perspective, the maximum amount of power your 545s are rated to be able to handle is 0.05 watts. And in response to that maximum input power they will produce a very loud 99 db of volume. In comparison, a pair of box-type (non-planar) speakers rated at 90 db/1 watt/1 meter will require about 40 watts, or 800 times as much power, to produce the same volume at a typical listening distance of around 10 feet.
The relative amount of power needed to drive cans (even something as difficult as a pair of Hifiman HE6) is a mere pittance compared to a regular pair of speakers so you don't have to pay for more power. Just a small amount of high quality ones.
2)
02-15-14: MulvelingThe tape outputs (as well as the main outputs) of your Exotik preamp are spec'd as having an output impedance of 330 ohms. That is about 10 times greater than the 32 ohm impedance of your headphones. For a line-level interface, ideally the load impedance should be at least 10 times greater than source impedance (at all audible frequencies); in this case it is 10 times less.
In your case, by running from tape-out you're almost certainly creating an impedance mismatch ....
3)As was noted you apparently have no means of adjusting headphone volume.
4)After looking at the manual for the preamp I can't tell for sure whether or not the tape outputs are driven by a buffer stage which isolates them from the main signal path. Many and perhaps most preamps do not provide a separate buffer stage for their tape outputs, although I suspect after looking at the manual that yours does. If it does not, however, I wouldn't be surprised if applying the 32 ohm impedance of the headphones to the tape outputs adversely affects the sound you hear through your speakers (just while the headphones are connected, of course; I would not expect any damage to occur, that might affect sonics when they are not connected).
A dedicated headphone amp, connected to the tape outputs, would resolve all of those issues.
Regards,
-- Al