Guys - Now that the amp has 100+ hours on it, and I've experimented with all 4 output impedance configurations, I'd like to return to the power/distortion and damping issues. And just to be clear, I'm not trying to "correct" anything. I am perfectly happy with the amp - it sounds stellar at 4, 8 and 16 ohms configurations (in comparison with which, 2 Ohms sounds a bit dry and lifeless - but I was perfectly happy with 2 Ohms before hearing 4, 8 and 16
). So this is just for fun and education - if I somehow manage to squeeze out a bit more SQ improvement from all this, that's just a bonus.
You previously suggested building a stereo L-pad that would present a fixed 8 ohm load to the amp. I have the required parts, but I don't know whether I should proceed because I'm unsure whether my headphones need the amp output to be "padded down". I suspect not, given that I can comfortably listen to them with the amp configured for 16 Ohms with the volume attenuators at -18 dB, at -9 dB when configured for 8 ohms, and pretty much wide open at 4 Ohms.
But I may well be missing something - so maybe it's helpful to return to something PB wrote a month ago in reference to using an L-pad:
If the resistor values get too large, you'll lose damping of the headphones and the bass will get lumpy on you. If the resistor values are too small, you'll load the amp down and it will distort.
Based on some reading I've done, my understanding is that the damping/lumpy-bass issue is a function of a headphone's impedance curve across the audible frequency bandwith. My guess is that if the headphone impedance dips appreciably at certain bass frequencies, a high output impedance could result in loss of damping at those frequencies and the bass will be loose and boomy. Do I have it right?
If my understanding is correct, then I don't think I need to worry about damping. The LCD 4s have an input impedance of 200 Ohms and the impedance versus frequency plot is dead flat - literally a straight line parallel to the x-axis for all frequencies. This has been tested and verified by various reviewers (Inner Fidelity, Stereophile, etc.). My understanding is that this is a common characteristic of planar magnetic headphones.
So my current thinking is that (a) no padding down is necessary, and (b) headphone damping is not a problem. BUT I have come across numerous references in online forums about "keeping an amp happy" by putting a resistor in parallel with each headphone channel -- e.g., 2 8 ohm resistors for an amp configured for 8 ohm speakers.
1st issue: Does the SII need to "see" the resistance for which it is configured to be "happy"? If so, is this what PJ was referring to when he mentioned "parafeed circuit resonance affected by amp load impedance"? And what PB meant when he mentioned too little resistance "loading the amp down" and causing it to distort?
One other thing I don't understand is how power hungry headphones can be be driven fully if resistors having a value much smaller than the headphone's impedance are placed in parallel with the headphones. While the headphones will still get the same voltage, wouldn't most of the current flow across the parallel resistor, bypassing the headphones? My thinking is that if voltage is fixed by the OTs and the amp cannot exceed 3.5 to 4 Wpc, then current is necessarily limited such that, with the parallel resistors in place, the headphones may not be able to draw as much current as they need. But maybe I misunderstand this too.
2nd issue - Distortion. I've tried to read up on this, but there are so many different types of distortion and I don't know which one or ones I should be educating myself about - what kind(s) of distortion are we talking about? And is it produced at the amp or the headphones?
Many thanks,
Derek