• WARNING: Tube/Valve amplifiers use potentially LETHAL HIGH VOLTAGES.
    Building, troubleshooting and testing of these amplifiers should only be
    performed by someone who is thoroughly familiar with
    the safety precautions around high voltages.

Using flea powered amps for headphones

I have five different flea powered ( 1 to 5 Watts) tube amps I’d like to try with some groovy new 27 ohm headphones I’ve bought - can I make an intermediary device to allow me to listen to headphone off the speaker terminals of these flea powered tube amps?
 
As you already know, headphones are generally very sensitive.

The attenuation of 8 and 1 is 19dB (-19dB).
Hopefully the amplifier hum will not be heard; but you will hear some hum on some amplifiers that were made for loudspeakers.

Real headphone amplifiers should not have any hum.
If they do have hum, shame on the designer.

Just my opinions
 
As you already know, headphones are generally very sensitive.

The attenuation of 8 and 1 is 19dB (-19dB).
Hopefully the amplifier hum will not be heard; but you will hear some hum on some amplifiers that were made for loudspeakers.

Real headphone amplifiers should not have any hum.
If they do have hum, shame on the designer.

Just my opinions

Examples of blissfully quiet designs?
 
ElArte,

Most of my vacuum tube amplifiers that I designed and built, have less than 100uVrms hum into an 8 Ohm non-inductive load resistor.
I only use the amplifiers to drive loudspeakers, not headphones.

And . . .
I do not use regulated filaments, I do not use regulated B+, and I do not use global negative feedback.

The types of negative feedback I sometimes use, are only local negative feedback, and are limited to:
Ultra Linear; Plate to Screen of Triode wired Pentodes/ Beam Power tubes; cathode to cathode Long Tailed Pair phase splitters; and push pull output stage's plate to plate.
Some of you never thought that a push pull output stage has plate to plate negative feedback, it does.

But, even my low hum amplifiers might have enough hum to be heard in many headphones, unless you use some attenuation from the output to the headphones.

Enjoy the Music

Merry Christmas!
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Reactions: ElArte
For a few years I used a 6V6 single end amp for headphones. I loved it. The only problem was a bit of buzz and hiss in the background. To be fair, it was not made for headphones and it as pleasantly quiet on speakers.

Headphones are an easy load to drive, but super revealing of noise.
 
  • Like
Reactions: ElArte
ElArte,

Most of my vacuum tube amplifiers that I designed and built, have less than 100uVrms hum into an 8 Ohm non-inductive load resistor.
I only use the amplifiers to drive loudspeakers, not headphones.

And . . .
I do not use regulated filaments, I do not use regulated B+, and I do not use global negative feedback.

The types of negative feedback I sometimes use, are only local negative feedback, and are limited to:
Ultra Linear; Plate to Screen of Triode wired Pentodes/ Beam Power tubes; cathode to cathode Long Tailed Pair phase splitters; and push pull output stage's plate to plate.
Some of you never thought that a push pull output stage has plate to plate negative feedback, it does.

But, even my low hum amplifiers might have enough hum to be heard in many headphones, unless you use some attenuation from the output to the headphones.

Enjoy the Music

Merry Christmas!

That’s exactly why I was asking! What a tough business! I got into headphones during COVID (turns out that indulgent speaker use is problematic when everyone is home 24/7, who knew?), they can reproduce levels of detail that are sacrificed to room acoustics with speakers.

BUT, it’s a double-edged sword! Unruly electrons are fully exposed. My tinkering with attenuation schemes has given mixed results.
 
  • Like
Reactions: 6A3sUMMER
Please keep in mind that any "output" impedance placed between the amp and the headphones will cause variations in their frequency response.
Those changes can be minimal or severe depending on the impedance of the headphones and the values of resistors used.
It is better not to add any resistance, but if it is necessary the value of the resistors used for the attenuation should be the lowest possible the amp can handle.
 
All the headphones I have ever owned had a very constant impedance across the audio band.

I doubt that very many headphones that are driven by a high impedance need much damping.
They generally are not like a woofer in a closed box, or in a ported enclosure.

And, a 32 Ohm phone that has almost 32 Ohm DCR, does not need 3.2 Ohms to drive it. The 32 Ohm DCR is generally the major factor of electrical damping.
 
  • Like
Reactions: kazap and Pano
All the headphones I have ever owned had a very constant impedance across the audio band.
The Sennheiser "300 ohm" large diaphragm phones can have a big bump.
Sennheiser HD650 Measurements Impedance.png
https://www.audiosciencereview.com/forum/index.php?threads/sennheiser-hd650-review-headphone.18774/
 
It's a bit all over the place depending on the technology and model...planars usually have constant impedance across the frequency range. Dynamics have oddities.

Here are a small selection of well-regarded headphones:

Focal Utopia Impedance Measurements.png


Focal Stellia Measurements Impedance closed back High-end headphone.png


Audio-Technica ATH-R70x Measurements Impedance Open Back Headphone.png


There is a bit of a pattern in these previous 3.

But then...

Hifiman Arya Measurements Impedance Planar Magnetic Headphone.png


ZMF Atticus Impedance measurements.png


SENNHEISER HD 660 S HiRes Audiophile Open Back Headphone Impedance Measurements.png


So, it varies, both in quantity and flatness...

I wish I understood better the implications, but I have not gotten there yet on my journey.
 
  • Like
Reactions: kazap
If the tube amp works as current source, there will be increased signal in low frequencies around fs. This can be very beneficial, sort of like loudness pot. But no tube amp is pure current source, its some combination of voltage source (indifferent to impedance changes) and current source.
Its all good.
 
  • Like
Reactions: kazap
PRR, ElArte, and adason,

I was wrong about the flat impedance curves of headphones.
So, I took a look at your Sennheiser 300 Ohm model.

The Sennheiser varies from about 310 to 480 Ohms.
About 395 +/- 85 Ohms; (395 +/- about 22%).
That is like an "8 Ohm loudspeaker" varying from about 6.3 Ohms to 9.7 Ohms.
Wow, pretty good!
I wish all loudspeakers had impedance curves that flat.

The worst headphone curves posted in this thread were about:
One at 4:1 impedance, and two at 2:1 Impedance.
Lots of loudspeakers easily exceed 4:1 impedance.

Perhaps we need to worry more about vacuum tube amplifiers that drive loudspeakers;
and worry a little less about amplifiers that drive many models of headphones.

Perhaps a fixed T attenuator, or a fixed Pi attenuator could be used to work with at least one model of headphone that has a wide impedance variation (A low impedance amplifier output, and a low impedance fixed T or Pi attenuator should flatten things quite a bit).

Now, back to driving those pesky loudspeakers!

And, I enjoy driving and listening to many different loudspeaker models.
Impedance . . . What would you like it to be?

Amplifiers can be voltage sources, current sources, or resistive signal sources.
Thevenin or Norton, Amplifiers always have some resistance, no matter how small or how big.
I think of many vacuum tube amplifiers with moderate damping factor as being a resistive signal source.

Just my opinions
 
Last edited:
  • Thank You
Reactions: kazap
All the headphones I have ever owned had a very constant impedance across the audio band.

I doubt that very many headphones that are driven by a high impedance need much damping.
They generally are not like a woofer in a closed box, or in a ported enclosure.

And, a 32 Ohm phone that has almost 32 Ohm DCR, does not need 3.2 Ohms to drive it. The 32 Ohm DCR is generally the major factor of electrical damping.
The reason for the lower source impedance I mentioned is to minimize the variations of the driving voltage, not damping of the headphones.
Years ago I did some headphones measurements for the company I was working and I found wide variations in impedance, our peers gave some examples above showing it.
 
  • Like
Reactions: kazap
At the risk of causing much consternation, I wonder if a simple opamp-based unity gain buffer board would be the most practical approach to opening most amps to any headphones.

But, I do not know what I am talking about here (not jesting either; I really don’t know), so it may not be as simple as that, or it may not be desired or necessary at all.
 
You may find a suitable opamp for a particular high impedance headphone; but in general the maximum output current available from opamps will be a limiter factor.
The standard solution is adding a pair of "buffer" output transistor to the output of the opamp and you are done.
Then comes the details of your design: will you bias this stage in class A?, you can even force the opamp to work in class A and the distortion will be very low.
A Google search will show you it, look for "biasing opamps into class A" and also "buffering opamps".
 
I have five different flea powered ( 1 to 5 Watts) tube amps I’d like to try with some groovy new 27 ohm headphones I’ve bought - can I make an intermediary device to allow me to listen to headphone off the speaker terminals of these flea powered tube amps?
I use my 45 SET (AC filament) to drive HD650 from time to time. No audible noise from headphone at all when no music is playing. I use a 10ohm(as I don’t have 8ohm resistors on hand) in parallel with each driver.
 
  • Thank You
Reactions: kazap
I use my 45 SET (AC filament) to drive HD650 from time to time. No audible noise from headphone at all when no music is playing. I use a 10ohm(as I don’t have 8ohm resistors on hand) in parallel with each driver.
I have done the same thing with my 2A3 TSE-II. I wired a 10 ohm resistor across the speaker terminals and connected the Sennheiser's across that resistor. With about 3 or 4 watts per channel on tap you do have to be really careful with inputs and the volume knob. There is no noticeable hum or hiss, but the TSE-II runs regulated DC on the heaters.
 
  • Like
Reactions: kazap