0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 6345 times.
This depends on how the DAC is made. Some DAC's, primarily R2R DAC's, use the balanced outputs to get the full capabilities of the ladder DAC (more DAC's paralleled), then you can convert balanced to unbalanced with an external solution, such as a signal transformer. Other DAC's use different output stages for balanced or unbalanced output. Sometimes one will sound better than the other, depending on how they create the output of each. For example, the Auralic Vega. It uses a fully discrete Orfeo output stage at the balanced outputs, and creates the unbalanced output from an opamp. So the balanced output, if you can use it, sounds better with this particular DAC. This has nothing to do with it being balanced or unbalanced, it's just a better sounding, more transparent output in this case. One does not really need a balanced consumer system. This is designed for long cable runs and noisy environments more than for sound quality.
A Chord Qute EX picked up on the used market is one sensational and affordable DAC. I recommend it very highly. It offers more solidity and substance that other cheaper DAC's don't get right, and its USB input is really great.
Mike,I have been using a geek out dac while waiting for my geek pulse s/f/i (dual mono unbalanced dac with femto clock and op-amp upgrade). The reason I purchased the pulse is because I am so happy with the very portable geek out. I opted not to get the balanced version because all of my equipment is unbalanced, but lately I have been wondering if I should have perhaps better future proofed myself with the balanced version. I guess time will tell. The geek sounds fantastic with my tortuga volume control>Bottlehead 2A3 stereomour>gr research wedgies with servo subs. Sorry, no help with your question.
I am currently using an iFi micro iDSD DAC in my personal system (Jolida tube preamp & amp and GR-Research LGK Wedgie speakers). Since this is considered a portable DAC/headphone amp I was looking for something that might be more appropriate in a stationary system. I have been looking at the Geek Pulse, unbalanced @ $400; the Geek Pulse X, balanced/dual mono @ $777 (for another week or so before the go up to full retail of $999 & $1,799 respectively); the still under development iFi mini iDSD, balanced (unsure of target price), or the OPPO HA-1, balanced @ $1,200.
Mike,Have you looked into the Eastern Electric Supreme DSD DAC ($1350)? It's on my list of potential DACs when I get around to upgrading.Here's a link to a review:http://www.digitalaudioreview.net/2014/09/eastern-electric-ready-supreme-and-junior-minimax-dsd-dacse/Best of luck (and enjoy the hunt!),Michael
Some technical points to consider:1. Almost all commonly used DAC chips output a balanced analog signal.2. Most DACs under discussion here (it seems these are DACs under $2K) are going to be using IC opamps for their I/V-output stages.3. A DAC as above with balanced outputs and single ended outputs can be done a couple of ways: two (dual) IC OPAs per channel to produce the balanced outputs, followed by a single dual IC OPA to sum the balanced signal for the single ended output. Or: fully separate output stages with two IC OPAs per channel for the balanced output and then one dual IC OPA to sum the outputs followed by one (single) IC OPA perchannel to drive the single ended output.If a DAC has only single ended outputs, then one can have just the dual OPA followed by single OPA, per channel, to drive the single ended outputs. Hopefully, no manufacturer, is just taking half of the balanced signal from the DAC chip and sending that to the single ended outputs, as this approach would lower the S/N ration by 6 dB, and raise distortion at the same time.Conclusion: to make an informed choice you really need to know the internal topography of the output stage(s) and how the single ended output is created. True balanced output will be better if it is going into a true balanced input, so if you plan on getting a DAC and keeping it for a long time, and maybe having a balanced input sometime in the future, you might consider getting a DAC with balanced and single ended outputs.Otherwise, if you are most concerned with getting a DAC with the best performance from the single ended outputs, this will most likely happen when you choose a DAC with single ended outputs only, but not in every case...