Manley STEELHEAD RC User Manual

Page 6

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3. SWITCH-SELECTABLE CARTRIDGE LOAD IMPEDANCE

An effective means of varying the load seen by the MC cartridge has been included in the form of

a 5-position rotary switch. This switch selects various taps on a specially manufactured dual-primary bi-

filar wound, high-bandwidth low-resistance and multiple-shielded nickel-core step-up autoformer. A drama

to make, the autoformer permits the minute MC cartridge signal power to be efficiently and transparently

transformed from low-volts/high-current to high-volts/ low-current. By avoiding conventional parasitic

cartridge termination resistors, none of the MC cartridge’s tiny signal power is thrown away before am-

plification. This results in improved system signal-to-noise ratio. Quite worthwhile provided, as in the

STEELHEAD, the autoformer has the necessary performance for the job. This pivotal component has had

engineering attention lavished upon it in the only way possible or practical: The Manley Labs magnetics

department. In-house transformer prototyping and manufacturing capabilities permit realization of extraor-

dinary transformer designs.

You may now audition your MC cartridge at or near the manufacturer’s specified loading resist-

ance without sacrificing any signal power through a parasitic load resistor. And explore the interesting

tonal shifts caused by intentional mild or severe mis-termination of the cartridge. The “right” setting will

ultimately depend on the cartridge in use, type of music being heard, other downstream equipment and,

most importantly, your personal preference. There will no doubt be moments when a technically “wrong”

setting will be musically “right” for a given situation. Do rest assured that, in this instance, a technically

wrong setting is completely harmless for all equipment involved.

In the case of the MM input, the typically higher cartridge output levels allow fixed resistor termina-

tion, with clockwise-most switch setting being the standard 47k-ohm load resistance. Those MM cartridges

capable of properly driving low impedance loads between 25 and 400 ohms should be auditioned through

both the MM and MC inputs. By doing so you may find the most appropriate sonic character through the

use of unconventional input arrangements. In short, experiment; don’t let the control labeling stop you. On

the contrary, we invite you to tweak away!

4.

SWITCH-SELECTABLE CARTRIDGE TERMINATION CAPACITANCE on the front

panel yet!

Termination capacitance may be applied to each channel independently in 10 pF steps, up to 1100 pico-

Farads. The termination capacitance is present at the gain-stage inputs, and is not affected by input selector

or gain switch changes. For best accuracy consult your phono interconnect cable literature or manufacturer to

determine how much of the termination capacitance may be attributed to the cable. Then subtract at least that

amount from the target capacitive termination value.

If the interconnect manufacturer does not know the amount of capacitance per unit length that their wire

presents (!), then refer to the following example for a starting point: Typical phono interconnect cables will

exhibit self-capacitance on the order of about 30 pF per foot. If the interconnect cable is 3 feet (~ 1 meter) in

length, you may expect about 90-100 pF of input capacitance to be present due to the interconnect cable alone.

If the cartridge manufacturer specifies a load capacitance of 150 pF then it is best to subtract the cable’s por-

tion, i.e. 90 pF. This yields a balance of 60 pF. Thus, the audition should start with the termination capacitance

switches set to 60 pF.

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