Tonight I hooked up the tiny Speco transformers per the wiring diagram on post 65 by mcandmar (thanks!) and had a listen. Quickie performs reasonably with these transformers. I don't notice substantial loss of bass, midrange is full and clear, and the high end is certainly good if not quite good. At the same time nothing is outstanding. Now, this is with Grado SR60s (old version) and Fostex T50RP, both of which are on the low side of impedance (32ohm and about 60ohm respectively).
I got the best performance using the 0.25W tap as the input (attached to the RCAs) and the brown tap (10W) connected to the headphones. I tried the recommended 32 ohm wiring per the diagram in post #65, but there seems like there's something wrong with that. When I inadvertently left out the jack ground, I got a small amount of very hollow sounding audio. When I put it back in, I got nothing. Checked and re-checked but found no problems.
As I read the diagram (see image), the ground is pulled off of the transformer BEFORE the headphone output. Wiring is input to 0.25W tap, common on the multi-tap side tied to the ground on the 8ohm side and that connected to Quickie ground, followed by the output attached to the 8ohm tap That would seem to be a recipe for no sound output even ignoring what the core is doing to the 8ohm "secondary."
Am I misunderstanding something here? Anyway, I tried a number of variations on the 32ohm wiring to no avail. I got little or no sound out each time. But since I was getting reasonable performance with the brown/50-200ohm wiring, I just went with that. I may experiment more, but reasonably satisfied with the way it is. I did try the red and orange taps (5w and 2.5w) and they weren't bad, but not as good as the brown/10W tap.
These Specos cost me less than $6 each plus small amount of shipping. At that cost, it's well worth experimenting. And I have a reasonable headphone amp to boot. I'm new to headphone amps, so not sure I have a good baseline to compare, but it's better than the output of my CD player (and OLD Pioneer PO-M6) which is no doubt op-amp based.