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My question is related to the compatibility of my tube preamp and my subwoofer with respect to impedance matching. I have a sonic frontiers line 2 tube preamp that is fed through balanced inputs from my DAC. The pre has a balanced output impedance of 270 ohms and a single ended output impedance of 135 ohms. I run single ended cables from the preamp to my rythmiks subwoofer that has an input impedance of 30k ohms. My system already has some rolled off character on the high end or maybe a slightly dark presentation. I am considering adding a second rythmik subwoofer to my system and cabling it in the same fashion. Is there a “large enough” difference between my pre’s output impedance and the two subwoofer’s input impedance such that I should not hear any detrimental effects? I know that there are no absolutes or “perfect” numbers when it comes to impedance matching scenarios but I wanted to get some educated opinions regarding compatibility.Thanks, Garth
How about frequency response changes. This section deals with the high frequency response of our active preamplifier with and without a buffer stage. We will use a 50pf IC vs 250pf IC. The output impedance with buffer stage is 100 ohms. Without is 2,000 (2k) ohms. "udb" is micro db, or millionths of one db, "mdb" is milli db, or thousandths of one db. Z is impedance. First, the high capacitance 250pf interconnect cable and the buffer stage, 100 ohms. The high frequency response drops approximately 44udb at 20 khz. With output Z of 2khz, the drop is 17mdb at 20khz. Not much is it. Now we use the 50pf interconnect cable 100 ohm output impedance. The result is 1.8udb at 20 khz. With output Z of 2khz, the drop is 0,6mdb at 20khz. Again, not much different. (Rarely, a longer IC with higher capacitance is neccessary and a buffer output stage is necessary)As one can see, the added buffer stage not only does not lower the distortion, but also does not appreciably extend the high frequency response.
I know that there are no absolutes or “perfect” numbers when it comes to impedance matching scenarios but I wanted to get some educated opinions regarding compatibility.
i dont know what's impendance matchingpreamps driving powr amps are volts driventhe most volts the better the driveo/p impendance should be lowi/p impendance should be higha factor of 1:10 is enough wrongmatching impendance here is not of any benefityou need to dumb as much as voltage as possiblethis means low preamp z into high amp zthis will enhance audio and dynamicscheersGeorge
I've been to college,i have designed analog color tv's pal/ntsc/secam, mono tv's made solely from discrete devices,vhs players,speakers,amplifiers,cassette players,vinyl turntables and more audio mixers, am modulator/transmitters,the list goes on...etcthank you for your kind words StevecheersGeorge
Hi Guys,Thanks for your input. First off I am not too proud to state that I am no expert in electrical engineering. I remember hearing or reading that as one connects two amps to a pre-amp rather than one, the pre’s output impedance doubles… or the amps input impedance halves or something like that. Then, if I connect a third amp, would the resistances be effected by a factor of three or four? But based on your input, even in a worse case scenario, with an output impedance of 1080 driving into an input impedance of 30K, there is no cause for concern. In addition, when selecting my interconnects, I selected one with as low of a capacitance that I could find while keeping the gauge at a reasonable level. Thanks again, Garth