Impedance Loading for SS Hyperion


"470 - 1000Ω" says Peter Ledermann. My phono stage offers 400. 800, 1,200. so I used 400 initially (extremely smooth), decided 800 was better (some edge present) and 1.2k even better still. There is one higher setting allowed for the MC input (along with several lower ones), 47k. So I’m trying it, and I like it. I keep swapping to the London Reference I am comparing the Hyperion to, and it seems the higher the impedance loading, the closer they sound. I am not experiencing the "peaked high end" I was warned of if loading is increased over 1000Ω.

Maybe my half a remaining ear (thanks, streptomycin!) simply can’t hear the cartridge screeching. Might work for others with high frequency loss? I think the issue is that I have a powered sub that is making sure I hear some bass whatever the loading is set to. If I turn it off the Quad 2905 speakers alone don't sound as if I'm listening to the full range of sound. Perhaps I should set the loading without the sub, and then do my usual procedure of setting the sub volume so I cannot tell that it is switched on, but all the same things sound better?

dogberry

Quad 24p, yes, fixed at 10Ω for MC. See here. As to why, you'd have to ask Tim deParavicini, who designed it, and that will prove difficult now.

I recently bought a the Sussurro MKII Gold along with the MCP2 phono stage. I've been playing around  with 1500 - 5K ohm loading. SS recommends greater than 470 ohms but I prefer the higher settings. 

Not sure, I haven't been able to find a circuit diagram. But I'm using the NuVista Vinyl now, which has solid state amps for MC use.