Amp preamp impedance matching...can anyone explain?


Hi, I currently have vintage tube gear, but want to try a SS amp with my tube preamp, and may try a SS preamp with my tube amps. I have noted there is an impedance matching issue, but do not understand it. Can anybody provide a quick summary?
Thanks
Jim
river251

Back in the days of tube audio gear in radio stations, almost everything was 600 ohm transformer coupled (inputs and outputs). Some professional broadcast solid state gear was even transformer coupled (not sure why, except for maybe RFI rejection). As you can see in my link above (600 ohm output transformer termination), there is still sometimes on-going discussion on the subject, as some highly sought after vintage pro processing gear has 600 ohm transformer outputs. AKG even made a K240 headphone that was rated at 600 ohms. I’ll have to dig back into some of my old broadcast magazines to refresh my memory on the subject, since it rarely concerns me anymore.

@dpop 

It is an interesting topic - but it seems likely that studio gear with 600 ohm loading requirements (apparently to damp ringing?) is operating with very different needs (power, bandwidth?) than a high-end 2ch home audio preamp. Here we need only efficient voltage transfer; no power. Ringing apparently not an issue with good line-level output transformers into any power amp load. Again, the VAC Renaissance V is not prescribing a specific load impedance. 

I do remember that a few headphone models present 600 ohm loads, usually from Beyerdynamic or AKG, which are brands that seem a bit more concerned with studio use than other headphone makers. Most dedicated headphone amps (which are typically OTL and "high current" designs) have very low output impedance, and have no problem driving those or any other headphones. I haven't seen a 600 ohm load specified or required for any other piece of home audio gear in many, many years.

@dpop 

Right near the start of that article: "600 Ohms in order to achieve maximum power transfer to the receiving equipment". Power transfer is not a requirement in this application. It's an interesting article and I'll read it, but I also think this is all confusing the main topic here, which concerns impedance matching a preamp to power amp for efficient voltage transfer, not power transfer - all meaningful power is supplied by the power amp reacting to the input voltage.

@mulveling 

Yeah, I guess I drove it off the rails a bit, but no one else seemed to be paying any attention to the original part of the discussion, so I figured no big deal.