I've been testing out a DMG ProSound set up that has a 3.5mm line-out connected to pre-pot and the built-in headphone jack connected to post-pot. Specifically the ASM v3 board.
I was curious how both lines would interract (as well as the speaker) so I tried different combinations of things and found something interesting: when a set of ear buds (or speakers) is connected to the line-out and another set of ear buds is connected to the internal jack the potentiometer (or perhaps more appropriately the post-pot headphones) affects the line-out headphones volume.
I recorded four different instances to a computer (with a line-in, not mic-in) using the line-out with just the internal speaker at max and min volume then another set with headphones plugged into the post-pot internal jack:
Line-out + Speaker Max: Full signal, good recording. Internal speaker audible, has hum
Line-out + Speaker Min: Full signal, good recording. Internal speaker muted, has hum
Line-out + Headphones Max: Low signal, poor recording.
Line-out + Headphones Min: Full signal, good recording.
My thinking is opening the potentiometer to the headphones is treating the original audio source like water, relieving the line-out full "pressure" and allowing the headphones to draw on it when opening the pot.
From what I understand both the pre and post sound mods bypass the internal amp while the speaker is still tied to an amp. I would think this explains why the speaker doesn't take away from the line-out signal since it takes the direct audio -> amp -> speaker. This also leads me to assume if the internal headphone jack is left stock and tied to the amp it would not affect the line-out signal, like the speaker.
Is this close to the correct thought process or is there more at work here? Or is this off completely?
I've seen it recommended (after experimenting) not to use headphones simultaneously with the line-out. Is this because it can be damaging to internals or peripherals or is it because of the signal loss to the line-out depending on heaphone volume?
Thanks for any insight!