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On that note, would you mind sharing if you use the USB 2.0 port on the DAC2?
Is the SBT a USB 2.0 device?
Do you need to use a USB hub like I have read elsewhere?
Lastly, can you tell me the order in which you connect the devices? I have tried using USB with the DAC2 and EDO, but that always resulted in the SBT hanging.
Hi, I followed the great instructions in this thread to convert a few of my DSD DFF files to DoP using foobar. I have a SBT with EDO feeding a Benchmark DAC2 via COAX. The files play fine 75% of the time and sounds great, but every now and then, the current song will stop playing and a few seconds later, the next track will play. The error I see on the SBT is "Connection reset by Server." It's interesting that the same song might skip some of the time, but not all (eg., it will play fine in its entirety). This leads me to believe that the song file is okay, but something else is making it skip. I am using the LMS version 7.7. At first, I thought it might be a bandwidth issue, but I also have some 24/192 files and those all play fine and never skip. So, it seems like it's a DoP issue. From the prior posts, it sounds like 24/192 files require more throughput and when I compare a 24/192 file and DoP file of the same song, I do see that the 24/192 version is larger. So, it doesn't appear to be a throughput issue via the COAX.I've not tried a USB connection since I noticed this problem, but when I first got the DAC2, I first tried to connect the SBT to it via USB, but wasn't able to get it to work, so I just used the COAX which works fine up to 24/192. Any thoughts?Thanks, Hammer.
I had to switch the DAC2 to USB 2.0
Upon further testing with the USB connection, I find that if I switch between playing files of different resolutions, the music eventually gets garbled. This does not happen when I use the coax connection. Anyone else experience this?
This is an important point, especially for Benchmark DAC2 users. For the DoP process to work, the DAC (any DAC) must be operating in USB 2.0 mode. For Benchmark DAC2 users, the default setting out of the box is USB 1.1. The DAC2 must be manually switched to USB 2.0 mode to receive 24/176, 24/192 or DSD files. For Windows users, the Benchmark USB 2.0 driver must be installed and selected in the software program. The driver will only install properly if the DAC2 is in USB2.0 mode.Once it's set, it works fine. But more than one DAC2 user (including this one) has been tripped up by the USB 1.1 vs. 2.0 switch during setup.Russ
And so with the DAC2 set to USB 2.0, I'm having the issue I described where if I switch tracks of different resolutions, the music gets garbled as if the USB connection gets out of sync or something...I also tried with and without a USB hub between the SBT and the DAC2 and same problem.
Can you rip the audio tracks from Blu-ray concert videos?
JonD,For $150 plus shipping you can purchase a Schiit Loki that you can use to convert DSD files. It has a pass-thru that will allow you to hook it up to your current PCM DAC and at the push of button you can listen to either PCM or DSD files. This is probably the most inexpensive way to convert those DoP files. I have one on order for a desktop system. When I get it next week or so, I'll let you know how it works with the Touch.Brett
Brett,Please explain the "push of a button" to play either DSD or PCM. You have two servers? Otherwise you need to change device/DAC drivers in your player (Jriver, etc) since your PCM DAC and your Loki cannot share drivers. I brought these logistics up on the DSD DAC thread but no one seemed to care. Schiit is very vague about the passthrough. It's just an analog in, period. Please correct me if I'm wrong.
Hey all,A couple of things. First, the above: sorry, edited this on the site to be more accurate. It now reads:To be totally clear, Loki does absolutely nothing to the output of your current DAC--it is simply a passive switcher. RCA inputs, PCB traces, and a switch are all that's in the signal path if you're using the passthrough.And yep, there are definitely active filters on there--it's just the opamps are really, really tiny, since they are MSOP packages. If you're looking only at the front of the board, you won't see 90% of what's going on--take a look at the back of the board at schiit.com/products/lokiAs far as managing two USB connections, Loki has a different USB device ID and reports as a different device than even the standard Schiit USB interface, so it's usually easy to switch between them using your playback software. Let us know if you have more questions, and I'll see if I can clear them up.All the best,Jason StoddardCo-FounderSchiit Audio