After an interesting phone call with a bottlehead who was experimenting with his crack and low impedance phones this afternoon I decided to emulate his experiment. The idea is very simple, you just put a 200-300 ohm resistor in series with each signal hot leg so the amp sees a higher impedance load. We just rigged up a bunch of clip leads and gave it a shot, comparing the circuit with the resistors in series vs. straight wire. We used MB Quart QP 400s (40 ohms) and AKG K701s (62 ohms)
We used a Crack with Speedball, all stock components. Shawn thought the midrange was made a little grungy or veiled with the resistors. Perhaps that could be improved with premium resistors, we were just using inexpensive metal films. I didn't notice that issue as much as Shawn, but I felt that the bass pop or punch was improved quite a bit with the resistors in series. There wasn't really more bass, but it was better defined. We both felt the Smack sounded cleaner and more natural in the midrange and treble than either configuration of the Crack but that the Crack might edge out the Smack on the very bottom.
I happen to find this to be the case with HD600s on the Crack vs. Smack too, and I find that I lean a bit towards the Crack with those cans. It might be worthwhile to repeat this test with a Crack that has a 5998 and film output caps, and I will do that when we have the time.