Hi all,
TO me it's all just one's and zero's, meaning it doesn't make the slightest difference.
Cheers,
Chris
Sorry, Chris, but that's just audiophile heresy.

It's engineer speak, cold and clinical, like your other post where you say an external hard drive is better than a flash drive, not because it sounds better but because it gives more bang for the buck! That is not an audiophile statement. That is engineer speak. And a cheap engineer, too.

All kidding aside, if I understand your position, you're saying that compared to a cheapo stock power cord, a well-constructed/designed one should make no difference in the signal from a CD transport, and that has simply not been my experience. I'm no engineer, but it seems to me that a proper cord helps to eliminate a/c noise and rfi that interferes with the component's circuitry/software and degrades the signal, achieving, at the end of the line, a cleaner output, even in the transmission of one's and zero's. Can you imagine a Stereophile or TAS reviewer using a cheapo stock cord on their mega-buck CD transport? Me neither. Why not? Because they don't want a cheapo cord compromising the sound of their equipment.
By that logic, if a fuse change reduces the amount of grunge that contaminates the BDP-1, could the signal that it transmits to a DAC be more perfect? I admit that your negative engineer speak has me worried, because unless someone takes the plunge to change the fuse then who knows how much of a difference it makes. Maybe it's worth the change, maybe not. I might try it but I'm reluctant because I don't like wasting money. But I'd be surprised, considering that a fuse is connected to the power supply, that some benefit can't be achieved.
Neal, thanks for the heads up on the W4S DAC. Considering what you've heard from other owners, I encourage you to "just do it!" Unscrew those screws and change that fuse! It sounds like a great way to get better sound from your unit without spending an arm and a leg. And there's nothing like a good, cheap upgrade to make one's day.
As for the BDP-1, it uses two fuses, one for the standby power supply (which I assume is pretty useless to change) and one for the main power supply, which is the potential sweet spot. Both fuses are 5*20mm slow-blows.
Hope that helps. Cheers, Robert
