Lpw, as I indicated earlier what is important is the preamp's output impedance at the (audible) frequency for which that output impedance is highest. That figure will often occur at 20 Hz, especially in the case of a tube preamp (due to the coupling capacitor that most but not all tube preamps have at their outputs), and in the case of a preamp having an output coupling capacitor will very often be much higher than the specified value. The specified value can be assumed to be based on midrange frequencies, unless explicitly indicated otherwise.
According to Stereophile's measurements:
Ref 3:The output impedance was also to spec., at 635 ohms balanced and 326 ohms unbalanced in the treble and midrange, but rose to 1437 ohms and 625 ohms, respectively, at 20Hz.
SLP-05:The SLP 05's output impedance is specified as a usefully low 400 ohms. However, I got significantly higher values for the unbalanced output of 15001600 ohms in the midrange and treble, rising to 3400 ohms at 20Hz, with similar if slightly lower figures for the balanced output.
The specs for your
X250.5 indicate an input impedance of 30K balanced and 20K unbalanced, which are the same as the input impedance specs for many of the other Pass amps. At some point in the past, though, their unbalanced input impedance may have been spec'd at 15K, lower than it really was and is. See the specs and measurements in Stereophile's review of the
XA30.5. That discrepancy perhaps contributed to some misconceptions.
The XP-10 and XP-20 are
spec'd as having output impedances of 1K balanced, 150 ohms unbalanced. Presumably balanced connections would be used between all of these particular components.
Based on the foregoing numbers for balanced connection, the Cary's output impedance rise at deep bass frequencies results in it not meeting the ideal minimum ratio of 10 that is applicable if the preamp's maximum output impedance across the audible frequency range is known (30K/approx. 3.4K = 8.8). Although it comes close enough to probably be marginally acceptable in some systems (depending on the deep bass extension of the speakers, for one thing).
The Ref 3 should be no problem, in terms of impedance matching. 30K/1.437K = 21.
Although I couldn't find measurements, it can be presumed that the specified 1K output impedance of the solid state Pass preamps does not rise significantly at 20 Hz (or other) frequencies, so it too should have no problem working into a 30K load.
Regards,
-- Al