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Along the same lines as John's comments, the chip can be important but there are many many variables, implementation is key. I've heard ES9018 DAC's that range from annoying to sublime, for my tastes of course. IMO getting the best out of the 9018 chips takes real work, it appears to be finicky about power supplies, clocks and signal routing, so basing your choice on just the chip isn't a good idea. I have a TEAC UD-501 which uses Burr-Brown DAC's, it's quite nice. I did have a Mytek which uses the 9018, I didn't care for it but I also have an Auralic Vega, which is also based on the 9018 chip, I am very fond of it, different implementation, different results. Hopefully you can find some local folks who can let you listen to various DAC's and get a feel for them.
At a 2009 AES presentation McGill University demonstrated that most trained listeners (studio folks and musicians) couldn't tell the difference (within 5%) between MP3 and Redbook. At that time they wanted to do a 2nd study comparing Redbook to high resolution formats, but why bother?My conclusion then is, No. Stick with a good implementation of Redbook, save money, and don't worry about the technology Merry-Go-Round.
Hi JLM.Excuse (Again) my ignorance, but what is Redbook?I saw that word many, many times here on AC,but never bother to ask the meaning, now I cannot sleep anymore over that.I need to know.Guy 13Please forget my question/request above.I've decided to step out of my lazyness and went searching on Wikipedia and found an answer to my (Ignorant) question.Now I will be able to sleep at night.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compact_Disc_Digital_Audio
I think redbook is a set of technical standards by industry professionals by which CDs are made. The book that contains the standards has a red cover. Thus the name redbook cd.
The short answer is: Yes. There is an audible difference with well done recordings, despite some of the math geeks arguments that human can't detect anything over the existing CD format.
I have some Hi-Rez music files but most are 16/44.1 FLAC; Is there any advantage in buying an ES9018 based DAC? I've read that:"The Sabre ES9018 is not solely a DAC. Its an ASIC with patented upsampling and jitter reduction algorithms, embedded S/PDIF receiver and so on... It's also a modular 8 channels DAC. The technically advanced ES9018 is a great departure from the simplistic PCM1704 r2r mono DAC. One could say, they are diametrically opposite in the DACs realm, in a technical standpoint."Not that I understand much of the above but will a 9018 DAC with 16/44.1 files necessarily give me better SQ?Thanks