Okay so after another day of listening, these are my impressions of the SST upgrade:
- a bit quicker and cleaner
- slightly better detailing and makes the music feel a tiny bit brighter; I had to doublecheck there wasn't an actual volume difference
- bass initially feels diminished, but when you get into the really deep sub frequencies you notice that it's more well defined; the midbass feels trimed down because it's cleaner and lacking that bloom
Overall it's a subtle change, but once it settles in it gets easier to pick out. Not a gamechanger, but a step up in all the right places. Would I recommend people send in their old 2B's and B60's? That's a bit of a tossup from me. I'm certainly happy with it, but I combined it with a checkup and cross-border excursion, and it was literally cheaper in that circumstance to get it all done at Bryston rather than do the upgrade myself. If you're on a shoestring budget and nabbed the 2B off ebay for peanuts, well then no it doesn't make sense to upgrade. If you're looking to eek out the best from your 2B/B60 and you're about due for a checkup anyways, then yeah do it. If you're Canadian but buying one from the US, then jumpin' jibblies this is absolutely the way to do it!
Now as a brief review of the built-in dac module, I wish I could be more enthusiastic but it's a bit of a *shrug* from me. I'm sure it was an excellent dac when first developed, but the dac landscape has changed dramatically in the 15(?) or so years since. Now I'm not saying it's a bad dac, not at all, but there's nothing fantastic in there either. Compared vs my NuPrime uDSD which is a rather good performing entry-level dac and headphone amp (retails $179), the Bryston module is a tiny bit airier but feels like the decays are stretched out. Detail retrieval and immersement feel roughly the same. Tonal balance of the dac module leans ever so slightly to the light side. Is it worth the add-on price if buying a new integrated? I think at the $1k+ price it commands, that's a no from me unless you really need to save the shelf space. For that kind of money you can easily get a used BDA-1 or any other number of dacs that will give you far more functionality.