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2. All these comparisons were made on my friend's system, not mine. Same model but different cartridge, different arm, different everything else. But I have a DIN plug at the end of my arm, the phono IC's availalable for test had only RCA's so it was this configuration or nothing.But I have a second tonearm with wiring that goes all the way from the cartridge pin clips to the RCA jacks of the preamp and I would like to get the same sound from that arm as well. Can anyone recommend a phono cable for this one. This must be of the ultra-thin and flexible variety so that it won't interfere with the free play of the arm.Thanks
In parallel?
Yes. Load resistors go to ground. You can hook up a parallel load by connecting resistors between the hot and ground on the RCA jack.neo
But the load resistance is in series with the 2 cable resistances (Hot & Return).
But "Throwback" first wrote: The load resistance is in series with the cable resistance.This is correct.But it shouldn't matter much even with a low 10 Ohm MC load.
I have read the this topic beginning to end and no one has mentioned the following:If you have 2 ohms of resistance in the rather thin wire between the cartridge and load resistor (which is indeed from hot to ground) there will be a 2 dB loss of signal due to that load and a 2 dB increase in noise (s/n ratio). In addition you are pulling current though the connector at the preamp and any other connection between the cartridge and preamp. A little bit of diode contact resistance will cause distortion due to this current. The best way, and of course the best way is not always the easiest, is to put the 10 ohm resistor right at the cartridge. You could solder a tiny 1/8 watt resistor across the solder end of the pins where the tone arm wires start. Then you would need no loading at the preamp. There would be no loss of signal, any contact diode effect would be eliminated (other than the one at the clips but they are usually gold and tighter than many RCA jacks. For those who want to play with loading I have made a little load box with 6 choices on one switch or 12 choices on two switches. It has nice gold jacks, a pair in and a pair out. You put the turntable leads in one end and a short interconnect on the other end to the preamp. It is very good for determining the load. If you are a person who likes to use loading to actually modify cartridge brightness and damping on a record by record basis you can leave it in the system. If you determine that one load plays all your records well they you can do what I suggested above, solder in the resistor you like best. Although I have not heard of people changing loads on particular records, I have found it useful in my system. It does make a greater difference than many of the tweaks I read about in the forums. It is a mystery to me that cartridge makers don't put the load resistor right in the cartridge. If we want a flat cartridge he isn't he the best to determine that value? He has the measuring equipment, the test records, hopefully the skill. Evidently we don't trust him (and gosh he made the damn thing) or we want the cartridge to sound "our way"