Need help for designing preamp with LM4562

Hello all,
I am working on a simple pre amp design with LM4562 and I will appreciate your thoughts and advises on that.
Here are the questions:

1) There is a 47 ohm resistor R16 right at the end of the output stage to isolate it from the cable capacitance.
There is another 47 ohm resistor R15 to limit in-rush current into coupling capacitor C5 which also prevents parasitic capacitance from cabling.
Is there a problem with this figure or in another word should I omit one of them or they are working just fine?

2) The voltage gain I needed for this stage was 2 so I chose 1k ohm for feedback resistors R11 & R14 and the reason for choosing 1k was for noise considerations.
Since the output current of LM4562 is around +/-26mA, I thought there wouldn't be a current issue when generally there is no need for output voltage more than 2 volts to drive any amplifier.
Is it safe to stay with 1k resistors?


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R15 to limit in-rush current into coupling capacitor C5
What in-rush current? The other side of C5 is normally high impedance. Taking 22k leak and 22k load, say 10k total load and 14V starting voltage, there is at-most 1.4mA of in-rush. Modern chips supply 10mA-50mA without complaint. Not a problem.

If you expect momentary shorts, modern chips usually won't blow-up if you try to suck more. (As opposed to the ancient '709, which said it withstood momentary shorts, but my slow-shorts usually killed one.)

Sending high level into a short "could" wear-down a chip, but that's probably years. And not much resistance needed to tame that.

If you have shorts on one output in a multi-channel live situations, the supply spikes can dirty-up other channels' signals. There are guides for such extreme abuse but nobody here does that.
 
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