Yes, in a way...not sure anything is entirely immune to RFI unless it is specifically built that way incorporating MILSPEC or some government standard to withstand RFI. Breaking this thought process down, I do believe the Io is built to such a high standard, that it is more immune and less likely to be influenced by RFI issues. Hence, my statement that the Io is built to such a high standard, that perhaps recommended loading values for someone who owns an Io skews to less loading = better performance, although, not in all instances. That is why your point about each system and the variables starting from the source to the output, and finally, our ears, will influence what we perceive as acceptable. That is also why I stated earlier; that there are no absolutes to this subject, only what sounds right. It is such a fickle hobby we have.My poor back...its testing time again. So I have dragged the Io halfway out of the rack, partly on a chair, so I can see the back, but only barely, due to my short (Kimber kcag) phono cable. Two days ago I fumbled at the back, using my fingers to "guess" the jumper positions - and it turns out I was right, I had in fact moved the jumpers from position 5 (121 ohm) to 7 (425 ohm). No wonder we had a great listening evening yesterday, with some more air and treble, and less of the "subdued" feeling with the 121 loading. Actually it was Ralph Karsten at Atma-sphere who suggested trying 121 ohm, but it may have been in connection to somewhat over-eager new compression (treble) drivers in the Dream Maker speakers, not yet fully broken in - not sure. But he wrote "try" - not "keep it there" - yet I had halfway forgotten about it. Now, I can try different loading / jumper positions - and will report back.
There seems to be two main ways to think about this. One is the capacitance calculation way, presented in the Lyra Atlas manual. According to this, the loading should be ca 800 ohm, in my case. The other is "the less loading the better" way, presented e g in some of the posts from Ralph. If the phono preamp is up to it, drop the extra loading, use the 47kohm standard. (Unless I understand it wrong!). What I think ca everyone agrees on, is that this is ultimately an individual decision, let your ears decide, like anything in audio a lot of variables come into it, the room, the system, the power situation to your home, and not to forget, the position of the planets - just joking. It seems that most Atlas users prefer a load at ca 4-500 ohm, but I have no reliable statistic. I searched in my audio log for comments from Aesthetix, and found a sentence to the effect that one should search for balance - between a too high loading (low ohm) making the sound dull, and a too low loading (high ohm) making it too bright. I'll try.
Audioquest4life - are you saying that the Io is fairly immune to RFI? Or, not so immune? The latter is my impression.
I have the same Aesthetix statement in my mind always when I am swapping cartridges. They even specify to find this balance for which we all seek to make our systems sound good.
I hope you don't hurt your back messing with the Io on the rack. It is hard to put those resistors into place if you don't have access. They are easy if you have full access. I have to either pull the rack out or slide it out at an angle and then squeeze behind with a small lamp, cell phone most of the times, lean forward and sideways, and fumble around behind barely seeing the number, LOL. A small telescopic mirror and a portable desk spot lamp would be useful.