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This is the second Archived Forum which was active between 1st March 2012 and 23rd February 2022

 

Cartridge preamp

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This post has 4 Replies | 1 Follower

tempest
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tempest Posted: Sat, Jan 31 2015 1:40 AM

I recently purchaced a refurbished Beogram 4200 ,with a MMC20CL  cartridge. This is run through a McIntosh MA6100. What I have noticed is that the output sound level is much less with this turntable/ catridge combo, than my Luxman table with a Stanton Cartridge. Do I need a phono preamp? If so what brand do you recommend.

Peter
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Earsdon
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Peter replied on Sat, Jan 31 2015 3:29 PM

It depends on the sound quality - if it sounds fine but quiet and turning up the volume makes it sound OK, then you are fine. B&O cartridges do have a lower output than many other moving magnet cartridges. However if it sounds quiet and very tinny, you need an RIAA pre-amplifier. I would by a relatively cheap one! See what Lifestyle or Sounds Heavenly have on offer!

Peter

chartz
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chartz replied on Sat, Jan 31 2015 4:25 PM

By the way, old B&O amps had an adjustment for that!

But I agree with Peter, just turn up the volume!

Jacques

sonavor
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sonavor replied on Sat, Jan 31 2015 5:14 PM

You shouldn't need an external phono preamp as the McIntosh MA6100 has a phono section.  As mentioned by the others above, the output of the Stanton is probably just higher that Bang & Olufsen.  If turning up the volume also results in poor sound quality, then you have a problem.  But that shouldn't be the case if your cartridge is in good order and your amplifier doesn't have a problem. I don't know if the McIntosh has input level adjustments but some amplifiers have level adjustments so the volume level is consistent across various music sources. 

Jeff
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Jeff replied on Sat, Jan 31 2015 7:54 PM

My Beosound 9000 doesn't have a phono input, so I use one of these:

http://www.phonopreamps.com/TC-770LCpp.html

It's got adjustable gain, and more gain than available than most phono preamps. It's specifically designed with the B&O cartridges in mind, even has a DIN socket for input.

If you use one of these, you'd run the output into a tape or aux input on your Mac, and could leave the table with the Stanton cartridge plugged into the Mac's phono input. I'm quite happy with the sound and gain on this preamp, it's a good piece and I recommend it for anyone with a B&O table who needs an outboard phono preamp. With it I was able to match the level of my phono and the internal CD player int he BS9000 quite easily.

Jeff

I'm afraid I'm recovering from the BeoVirus. Sad

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