People talk a lot on this forum and others about the importance of correct loading for mc cartridges, but I've seen precious little mention of the damping effect of the back emf created when current is drawn from a cartridge. It's commonly known that the motion of a loudspeaker's voice-coil creates a current which causes a back emf, and the back emf damps the motion of the cone, and the current is maximised by having the speaker driven from an amplifier with a low output impedance (hence an amplifier's output impedance is also often specified as its damping factor). However, the equivalent damping which takes place in a cartridge (and can be manipulated by the load impedance) seems to be almost universally unrecognised or ignored. The only mention I've ever seen of it was something on the Graham Slee website. Ironically, whereas most people recommend a fairly low impedance for loading mc cartridges (usually between 30 and 100 ohms) which would increase damping, Graham Slee recommends a higher impedance (470 ohms) to minimise damping.
I presume the damping of the motion of the stylus would manifest itself as a modification of its dynamic compliance. I also presume that the damping effect of back emf would have a much wider and flatter bandwidth than the damping effect of a piece of rubber. Has anyone ever managed to measure anything or know of any such measurements? Or have I (and Graham Slee) imagined the whole phenomenon?

