A new walnut console didn't end up having quite enough space for all of my components (including the turntable), leaving me to run some interconnects across the room to available shelving. Due to the room dimensions and odd layout, approximately 5m of cable are needed to go between the shelf and console cabinet.
Right now, this has meant keeping the Stereomour, a headphone amp (either the Crack or Asgard, depending on what headphones I am listening to that month), and a DAC (Bifrost Uber) inside of the cabinet, and the turntable and Seduction on the aforementioned shelving. I'm trying to determine what the least damaging solution (sonically) would be here. My options (some of which have been tried):
1) I've used a cheap ADC (48kHz) to digitize the output of the Seduction, whose benefit is the ability to run an optical cable all the way to the DAC, picking up no noise in the process (and thereby avoiding any analog signal issues). Problem is, this sounds like feces - shrill, thin, and defeating the purpose of vinyl. A better ADC might help, perhaps.....
2) Run 5m of cable from the Seduction to the Stereomour. The problem here would be cable capacitance. If I went with something like the 12pF/ft stuff from Blue Jeans Cable, 5m would mean the Seduction would only have to drive 180pF of capacitance. Is that tolerable, especially if I went to a larger output capacitor? The usual limit I see with the .47uF output capacitors is about 1m, but typical cables are also like 50-75pF/ft, not 12.
3) A third idea would be to slip an op-amp buffer under the Seduction for a low impedance output, thus avoiding the cable capacitance issue. Downside here is the insertion of silicon in an otherwise all-tube signal chain.
4) A fourth idea would be to move the Seduction to the cabinet (which has just enough room) and run a line for the cartridge. I think this would be the worst option, due to the very low voltage (4mV for my cart) and aforementioned capacitance issue.
5) A final idea would be to insert the Quickie in the chain, wired as a cathode follower. The 3S4 tubes are pretty low current, however, and I seem to remember that the output impedance of a cathode follower is simply the inverse of its transconductance. I can't find that number for the tube run as a triode, however. Any guesses as to what the output impedance would be as a cathode follower? I'm guessing that this would not yield much improvement in terms of driving cable over the Seduction with larger capacitors and really low capacitance cable.
Any thoughts?