New to headphone amps --- I'm wondering .....


I recently got my first pair of decent headphones, AKG 545s, which I bought to use both at home on my main system and outside with my ipod for hiking etc. Since my pre-amp at home doesn't have a headphone out, I connect to my system via the tape out. I get pretty nice detailed sound at a decent volume that way, but have read that virtually everyone believes that a dedicated headphone amp improves sound quality. So I'm considering that, maybe in the $300 - 600 range. But I'm wondering how an amp at that price point could outdo or even sound as good as my main rig (Linn Exotic and 2500, with Renew DS) given the massive difference in price (amp pre-amp together list for around 7k). Is there something about headphone amps that I'm missing?

And if a headphone amp would help in my case, any recommendations for something that would work well with AKG 545s (very similar to 550s) with my home system?

Thanks .....
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I use a dedicated headphone amp now out of necessity but also did with a $12K main rig. This particular headphone amp is a tube amp made by the disgraced manufacturer SinglePower (but it still sound great to me).
I would refer you to the HedFi.Org web site for all the information you seek on headphones and the amps to power them.
My own experience is that good headphones sound much better with a dedicated amp. You may find yourself witth more than one pair of headphones if you follow this path, I did.
Thanks. I get the sense that many people find that headphone amps make major improvements. But can anyone explain why a headphone amp that costs a fraction of the cost of one's much more costly main rig would sound better?

I'm running RCA cables into a relatively cheap RCA to mini-plug adapter, that then goes to my headphones. I imagine the cheap adapter isn't helping, esp compared the the Stereovox interconnects I use to connect my the components in my main rig.
How are you controlling the volume then?

I find the headfi provides some advantages over a normal hifi system.

The relative amount of power needed to drive cans (even something as difficult as a pair of Hifiman HE6) is a mere pittance compared to a regular pair of speakers so you don't have to pay for more power. Just a small amount of high quality ones.

Two, hifi systems are affected a lot by the room the system is in. You can do room EQ or use copious amounts of room treatment but there are limits to what can be achieved. On a good set of cans, the room is out of the equation, as the sound goes from the transducers to your ears directly. No reflected sound, no diffused sound. You can often pick up far more detail in a good set of cans that is hard to discern even on speaker systems that are multiples more in cost.

The downsides to me are in the way soundstage is reproduced. You can experience wider sound stages in headfi with the right gear but fundamentally, the main problem is that the centre of the soundstage is between your ears and inside your head. That can sound unnatural. In a hifi system, the sound is in front of you, with a good amount of depth that mimic a live performance, almost.

There are headphones like the Sennheiser HD800 which angle the drivers somewhat and can create an effect of the soundstage outside your head but it is still a little subtle and doesn't beat even a cheap pair of speakers in creating that deep soundstage.

As for head amps, like with things hifi, it's always best to listen and audition. Some amps have good synergies with some headphones so it's always best to test if the combo works in your system. I found my Schiit Lyr for instance to be a good match for the HD800 and the HE6 but was a tad noisy with my LCD3.

I think Schiit headphone amps are hard to beat for the price and features.
"But can anyone explain why a headphone amp that costs a fraction of the cost of one's much more costly main rig would sound better?"

There are no crossovers in headphones. You can obtain high quality SET Class A power headphone amps relatively inexpensively. There are no room interactions for headphones, thus no expensive room treatments. There are no requirements for speaker cables. No requirements for preamp.