First time building CMOY - Need some help

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No matter what you do, asking an op amp to drive low impedance headphones directly from its output is going to result in nonlinearity. I have prototyped various op amp based headphone amps and have come up with some configurations that work and sound great. Applying large amounts of negative feedback to grossly nonlinear circuits can provide practical circuits, but the distortion spectra will become more complex as the transfer functions of the active devices (in this case the output stage of the op amp) become more nonlinear.

Is this audible? That depends on a whole lot of stuff. Is it measureable? You bet it is.

Traditional distortion specifications (harmonic distortion and intermodulation distortion) are important benchmarks, but they don't address higher harmonic generation. Back in the days of tube amps, there usually wasn't much to talk about past the third harmonic. Global feedback was not universal and when employed it did not have the very large loop gain that is typical of modern designs (especially op amp based designs). But the more stages that you include inside a global feedback loop, the more complex the distortion spectra will be.

The 49600 is a real buffer, and allows the op amp to operate in class A full time. It also thermally isolates the input stage from the heat generated by the output stage. It also introduces much less phase shift than any op amp. And finally it operates in a much more linear fashion than an op amp driving a low impedance load. So there's very good reasons why it sounds so good.
 
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@skd123 I've built CMOYs using TL072😱,4558😱😱, & also more acceptable by DIYers "The OPA2134". If you read datasheets, most opamps are spec. at 600R or above loads. JRC4556 is always the winner. I used scope to observe clipping behaviour @33R load.
Hint- Use +/- 5V to power CMOY with gain not exceeding 3X.
Sent you PM.
 
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