F5 input impedance

Can the input impedance be optimized for the preamp? If you have a low output preamp would it be better to increase the input inpedance of the amp?
I ask because I'm considering a Rougue RP-1 preamp which only has 7dB of gain on the line stage.
 
The input impedance doesn't have a significant effect on the gain of the amplifier,
and it would be an odd preamp that had issues with the input impedance range we
are talking about. The Rogue would appear to want something at 22 Kohm or
greater based on Stereophile's measurements.
 
Nelson- thanks for your feedback on this and also thanks for supporting and sharing your knowledge with the diy community.

I just finshed the F5 a few weeks ago and it sounds fantastic!
I'm lining up a demo Rouge preamp so I'll report back on how it sounds with the F5.
 
The input resistor is bound by 3 things:

1 The input capacitance of the power amp. You want the input resistor to be 10x lower than the capacitive resistance at the highest frequency you are interested in.

2. The output impedance of your preamp / source. You would like the resister to be 10x higher than the output Z.

3. Tradition. Tube amps are typically 100K ohm. Solid state range from 10k to 50k ohm.


There may be an opportunity to optimize noise, distortion, frequency response or something else.


HTH


Doug