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A little known fact: analog volume control on a DAC means bringing the signals down to single ended, plus one or two additional buffer stages. I just don't understand what some people have against digital attenuation, which allows elimination of added dynamic-range compromising circuitry in the signal path.
While looking at the last demo DAC DAC HS in stock, I thought "something I wished for"....During the holidays each year, I typically buy myself an "audio gift", and for a few years, my gift was a new DAC. However, I was disappointed in the sound quality sub-$1000. This was motivation to make something significantly better. I wasn't interested in fancy features.
Right now IME the hot DAC is the $799 Oppo Sonica (scheduled to be released next month). Basically a HA-1 without headphone amp but with the new ESS ES9038PRO SABRE chip.
It ain't all just about the DAC chip, ladies and gents - implementation is a big part of the equation! Nonetheless I reserve comment until actually hearing it.
remember these companies are in this business to make a profit, and if it's cheap, it's cheap.
Definitely agree. The output stage can be built many different ways, and most DACs are simply a regurgitation of the chip maker's reference design. Beware of the cheap stuff since that typically means cost reduction through component substitution. Precision parts tend to be expensive. Other red flags include widespread expensive advertising - the end customer pays for that, plus overhead, plus whatever marketing costs are involved. You're likely to get a better deal from small, lesser known companies than the guys spending millions on advertising. Even worse, buying from a dealer that DOUBLES the price. If you find yourself saying "how do they do it so cheap", referring to what seems like lots of hardware for the money (Oppo, etc.), remember these companies are in this business to make a profit, and if it's cheap, it's cheap.
Oppo's dealer margins are like 10%, so no Oppo dealers laughing to the bank there......
Just an FYI, I'll have an iFi Black iDSD unit in my hands in the next few days. Just as context, I like the old/original silver iDSD better than any other DAC I heard up to the Vega at $3500. I'm hoping the Black is a significant improvement on the Silver.
Patented R2R technology. This is the first discrete DAC that has linear compensation and this allows for ultimate music reproduction accuracy. Dual R2R network for PCM, and Dual R2R network for DSD!
Beautiful clean layout.Curiousity question - If those are in fact through-panel hex nuts retaining the RCA and BNC jacks, how is the second nut installed on the rather closely spaced Coax1/Coax2 jack group?Steve
Under $2k, Ayre Codex.