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Jerome, was DSD format DSD 64 or DSD 128?Scotty
If you are referring to the Tchaikovsky 6th you mentioned I have it. I bought it direct from Pentatone in DSD format. Can't remember what it sounded like but I can queue it up for a listen when I have some time.I don't buy a lot of music from them but there some titles that I like. It has been a mixed bag for me. As I said, my listening preferences are mostly in the past. I am an enormous fan of the big conductors and orchestras of the day, a fan of the recording methods, the microphones used, etc. etc. Most modern recordings that I have heard just don't produce the sort of breathtaking sound that was commonplace with Decca/London, RCA Living Stereo, and Mercury Living Presence.--Jerome
I'm a fan of many modern recordings/performances. Still, I can very much relate to your approach. I have a lot of RCA Red Seal SACD recordings, as well as some Mercury Living Presence SACD's. One of my favorites is this one:
Very nice. I like the Byron Janis Rachmaninoff recordings on MLP as well. I have them on original vintage vinyl pressings, 180g vinyl reissues from Speakers Corner, and the Mercury SACDs.But when it comes to music for piano and orchestra my absolute favorite is Brahms Piano Concerto No. 1:--Jerome
I think it would be good to address a couple of points. 1) DAC chips convert to analog. However, the analog stage in all DAC chips I know of is designed PP class B up until at least 3 years ago or so. I have not checked since. Huge amounts of global negative feedback are used. One manufacturer I contacted years ago reasoned that class A creates too much dissipation. There could be other problems as well.2) Second point, discuss this between yourselves as I will not give the answer. Nyquist requires two samples to reproduce. What happens when a "note's" initial signal is introduced between two samples?Be sure to cover all the possible possibilities. Did any of the links discuss these two points? I do like digital (higher res is better from my experience) and I love vinyl as well. This assumes both are recorded well. I will not take sides in this debate.CheersSteve
I'm thinking the Class B operation isn't too big a problem. For example the measurements of the Auralic Vega's full scale analogue output, which I assume to at the 0dB point vs negative something or other below 0dB, have the THD+N at –116dB, or just 0.0002%. This was into a 600ohm load. And more importantly than that it doesn't sound too bad either. Class B operation may help reduce thermal debiasing in the chip due to uneven heating across the chips substrate. A far as the feedback goes I suspect that the propagation delay may not be too big a problem due the extremely small distance between points on the chip. Other than that I got nothing. Scotty
2) Second point, discuss this between yourselves as I will not give the answer. Nyquist requires two samples to reproduce. What happens when a "note's" initial signal is introduced between two samples?Be sure to cover all the possible possibilities. Did any of the links discuss these two points?
I think it would be good to address a couple of points. 1) DAC chips convert to analog. However, the analog stage in all DAC chips I know of is designed PP class B up until at least 3 years ago or so. I have not checked since. Huge amounts of global negative feedback are used. One manufacturer I contacted years ago reasoned that class A creates too much dissipation. There could be other problems as well.CheersSteve
first point,huge global nfb, can work with class-a as well,heat dissipation and o/p zout dont apply since it is a small signal stage...
second point,if you have nothing to offer, then don't mention that you know and don't want to tell...
third point,you can't sit on the fence, you give us the impression you know nothing on either format...
cheers
Cd player dac chips convert to a "quasi-digital" analogue output before filtering. Filtering smooths out the sine wave. That was my point. The analogue info stored on vinyl is a sine wave right at the stylus. There is no electronic hoop-la to get the signal to analogue (or at least measure good).