Need advice: Turntable Output Voltage


Hello,

I am getting into vinyl and I need some help with my current stereo system, mostly with understanding the specs.

I have a Yahama RX-V1600 AV Receiver with a built-in phono pre-amp. The Input Sensitivity for the PHONO stage in the Yamaha is 3.5mV/47kOhms. The maximum input is 60mV or more, according to the user manual. I hooked up a Technics SL-QD33 turntable to the receiver. The Technics has an output voltage of 2.5mV at 1 kHz, with a recommended load impedence of 47kOhm~100kOhms. I am using a Grado Black cartridge with 5mV output, I believe.

Anyways, the turntable playback is rather quiet. I literally have to crank it up to get to reasonable listening levels. This may be a total noob question, but is the Technics output too low for the Yamaha receiver's phono stage?

I understand Phono is typically quieter than digital sources (for reasons we do not need to go into), but what do I need to do to get this analog system thumping? I do not think the Yamaha's phono pre-amp is faulty. I have hooked up an external Cambridge Audio phono pre-amp to the system as well, and it is still pretty quiet.

I was thinking about upping the "volume trim" on the Phono input by 6 db to see if this pumps up the volume some, although it may just make it even out relative to other input sources. Also, I am concerned that the volume trim may just amplify low-level noise/hiss.

Everything in the system is connected correctly and the turntable is grounded to the receiver.

Any advice would be much appreciated.

Thanks.
zdkaiser

Showing 1 response by jameswei

It seems to me that your phono board is not powered up as it should be.

The really low volume is like you feeding your phono signal directly into a high level input, without the amplification of a phono preamp circuit.

Of course I'm sure you have your phono signal plugged into the correct inputs on the back of your Yamaha, but an unpowered phono preamp circuit would just be passing your signal directly to your high level preamp at a low level that would require a high setting on the volume control.

Maybe a service check is warranted.