A comparable phono preamp


I recently bought a rouge audio rp7 preamp my amp is a bryston 4b my turntable is a linn basic with an akito tonearm with a linn adict mm cartridge mounted to it.I would like to at a later time up date it with a MC cartridge. My speakers are a pair of dynaudio special fortys with a rel s510 sub woofer. Now my preamp has no phono section nor dose the turntable. The phono preamp I have sounds cold harsh and to bright. It is a NAD PP4 and I am using it because it is what I use to record vynal to digital with a USB out. I should of bought a phono preamp when i bought the preamp .Now I am looking for a phono preamp that will give me that warm natural sound I am looking for. Can anyone suggest to me a phono preamp that will make my system sound like what I have spent to build it. TY mal11963

mal11963

Showing 1 response by ghdprentice

I’ve had turntables for over 50 years. As I upgraded my components, it became increasingly clear that the phono stage was a critical component. I tried inexpensive Phonostage after Phonostage, slowly increasing the cost (used at first). My rule of thumb now is, one should invest as much in a phono stage as a preamp, amp, streamer or turntable… a generality.

 

Depending on your long term goals of your system. If your long term intent is to build ever better versions of your system… then it will best suit you to get a very good Phonostage now. This will allow you to hear the best your TT and cartridge have to offer. If you are just shooting for something comparable with your current TT and future cartridge budget that amount.

 

I recommend Audio Research (alternatively Conrad Johnson, or VAC). The Audio Research is very detailed without being hard, great midrange bloom, complimenting the vinyl playback media. My highest recommendation would be a used ARC PH8. To me it is the sweet spot of cost and outstanding performance. I owned many models before and after. I now own a REF3. If you cannot afford that drop back to a PH6 or PH7. They have great resale value, are audio-hill grade equipment and are highly reliable. But of course you buy for the sound quality.