Q1) Good question. I couldn't find input impedance specs on the 1980s Stax adapters, which would allow a definitive answer. FWIW, though, my guess is that there would be no problem. Not sure I'd bet the health of my amp on it, though. I did find the input impedance of the ca. 1970 Stax SRD-5 described here as follows:
Q2) Sure. Stax itself makes several models today, as well as Woo Audio and possibly one or two others. They are not inexpensive, however.
BTW, I also have a pair of Stax Lambda Pro headphones, which I purchased new in the 1980s. I recently acquired a Stax SRM-T1 tube headphone amplifier, ca. 1990, at a small fraction of the price of the current Stax models. It replaced the solid state Stax SRM-1/Mk-2 amplifier and Stax ED-1 Diffuse Field Equalizer combo I had been using for the past 25 years or so. I'm VERY pleased with the improvement. SRM-T1's don't seem to appear for sale very often, but if you see one in good condition grab it!
I've connected these Stax models, btw, to the tape outputs of my preamp, not to the main preamp outputs (which would just introduce unnecessary circuitry and an unnecessary volume control into the signal path).
Regards,
-- Al
Not more than 30 Ohms anywhere in the audio band. 5 Ohms DC.If the spec on your adapter is similar, which I would guess it is, there would be no problem. A problem might arise if the input impedance is significantly higher than that, in which case potentially damaging or reliability-degrading "inductive kickback" could occur in the output transformer of the amp (assuming the amp has an output transformer).
Q2) Sure. Stax itself makes several models today, as well as Woo Audio and possibly one or two others. They are not inexpensive, however.
BTW, I also have a pair of Stax Lambda Pro headphones, which I purchased new in the 1980s. I recently acquired a Stax SRM-T1 tube headphone amplifier, ca. 1990, at a small fraction of the price of the current Stax models. It replaced the solid state Stax SRM-1/Mk-2 amplifier and Stax ED-1 Diffuse Field Equalizer combo I had been using for the past 25 years or so. I'm VERY pleased with the improvement. SRM-T1's don't seem to appear for sale very often, but if you see one in good condition grab it!
I've connected these Stax models, btw, to the tape outputs of my preamp, not to the main preamp outputs (which would just introduce unnecessary circuitry and an unnecessary volume control into the signal path).
Regards,
-- Al