Mismatched Preamp/Amp Impedance--What Will I Hear?


I've got a Ming Da (Meixing) MC-7R tube preamp sitting in a closet. I got a good deal a few years ago and it uses common tubes that I have a lot of, so I bought it. However, I never used it much because it didn't sound as good as my main tube preamp.

Anyway, I'm thinking of taking it out of storage and at least playing with it. Its output impedance is 100K ohms! All of my solid state power amps have input impedance between 25K and 50K ohms. Cable length between the two will be one meter.

What will I hear (or not hear) as a result of the super high output impedance of this preamp. My main preamp easily satisfies the 1 to 10 rule, but the MC-7R doesn't come even close.

Thanks for any insights.
noibs

Showing 1 response by almarg

I feel pretty certain that the specs you are looking at are wrong. 100K output impedance is a ridiculous number that makes no sense.

That said, if you connect a 100K output impedance into a 25K input impedance you would get approximately a 14db reduction in volume relative to the volume you would have if the 1 to 10 rule were satisfied. You would also get various frequency response irregularities corresponding to differences in the variations of the two impedances with frequency. That is likely to be most pronounced in the deep bass, where tube preamp output impedances tend to rise, causing the deep bass to be attenuated relative to higher frequencies.

You would also get some rolloff of the upper treble due to interaction of the output impedance with cable capacitance, even at the short one meter length, unless your cable has particularly low capacitance (e.g. 12pf/ft, such as some of the Blue Jeans cables).

Regards,
-- Al