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....So I looked up the price of SACD players and they seem to start at around $3000. Ouch, that’s quite a lot of money just to hear about 30 SACDs. Is DSD worth it?
Is DSD worth it?
Not for me, and especially if your discs are older analogue recordings re-released on SACD. If the recordings were recorded in DSD end to end, without conversion or manipulation and you plan on increasing that collection, then maybe.
I will add where SACD shines is in multi-channel playback, the only true multi-channel format as far as I know. I have two Sony SACD players and sure didn't spend 3 grand on them. The problem is my older player is the HDMI is not compatible with newer HDMI inputs so you'll have to go with interconnects most likely. MY experience with the CD Hybrid layer is that it is not the proper thickness for CD Redbook playback so you're not hearing what the CD really should sound like unless you transfer this layer to a cd-r that has the correct Redbook thickness, it makes a difference believe it or not.If you are not going to listen in multi-channel I would not bother with it.
Agree with other comments you don't have to spend $3K for an SACD player although players at this price and above might perform and sound better. I have no experience with them in this price range however. Check out the link below for others more modestly priced. Marantz used to make one much less expensive than shown here but apparently they must have discontinued those models.https://www.musicdirect.com/equipment/disc-player/?_bc_fsnf=1&Player%20Format=SACD/CD&sort=priceasc.
Get a used Sony or Pioneer bluray?SACD player on ebay for $40-$75. Find a model that's in the ripping SACDs thread at hifihaven: https://hifihaven.org/index.php?threads/rip-sacd-with-a-blu-ray-player.3652/You can do a simple hack to the disc player that allows you to rip the DSD layer of your SACD and play it back as a DSD file from your server. You can use the above player for playback of discs, but I'd just reserve it for ripping SACDs. This will sound just as good as an expensive player and will save you big bucks.
I’ve read about this. Sounds like a great fix but I won’t be able to play it as DSD, so far as I understand anyway. That’s because my DAC doesn’t do DSD. I have a Berkeley Audio DAC Reference Series 2. As I mentioned, I hesitated to buy it because it doesn’t do DAD, but I bought it used for a fraction of its MSRP. It was too good a deal to pass up.
I have a Berkeley Audio DAC Reference Series 2.
The $19,500 Berkeley looks like a very nice DAC. Comparing it's sound to an old, used $600 SACD player will probably be a disappointment even if you are finally listening to the Holy Grail SACD sound. As you figured out, a $2000-$3000 player will get you close.************************************************************Yes indeed, you have definitely decoded (pun intended) my reason for thinking a starting point for SACD Players would be about $3000. ************************************************************ The Berkekey Reference will decode all PCM resolutions up to 192/24. My question is how to get the higher resolutions into the Berkeley? Certainly not a CD or SACD player so I guess you will need the optional $1995 Berkeley Alpha USB USB-to-AES/EBU converter.*************************************************************You really have my attention here. As it happens I do own the Alpha USB, another exceptionally good deal I lucked into. This time it was on a player that was used only a few days and had a nice but not spectacularly discounted price. I bought it to use at my desktop computer’s good audio system but was advised to put it with the Berkeley DAC. BUT….I’ve no idea why it would be useful in this SACD/DSD situation under discussion, so I’m all ears, please do explain.************************************************************* No ripped hi-res or converted SACD files for you unless you get into computer audio. The Hollis Audio HAL MS-6 Music Server is much, much better than a noisy laptop and is only $450. The HAL and will send hi-res files to a USB/SPDIF converter then to your Berkeley. Someone here on AC must have an unused USB/SPDIF converter laying around, it doesn't need to be the Berkeley Alpha.https://www.audiocircle.com/index.php?topic=175173.0Robert Harley has some interesting comments in his TAS review of the Berkeley Audio Design Alpha DAC Reference Series 2:https://www.theabsolutesound.com/articles/berkeley-audio-design-alpha-dac-reference-series-2/"If you want to play DSD files you’ll need to convert those files to PCM in a computer.""After I listened to a wide range of file resolutions through the Series 2, it struck me that the most impressive aspect of this DAC isn’t its all-out performance with 176.4kHz/24-bit files (which is spectacular), but what it can do with garden-variety CD files. The sound quality difference between CD and high-resolution sources is less stark through the Series 2 than through any other DAC I’ve heard. It’s surprising how good CD can sound when played back through a state-of-the-art system (CD ripped to an Aurender W20 and decoded by the Series 2 with the Berkeley Alpha USB converter)."The Music Room has a Aurender W20 Network Streamer / Server; W-20; 12TB SSD; Silver for $7,009.17https://tmraudio.com/components/music-servers-streamers/aurender-w20-network-streamer-server-w-20-12tb-ssd-silver/"The Aurender W20 is in my experience the current state of the art in music servers. It excels in every parameter; its array of features is unmatched, the 12TB of available storage will accommodate virtually any library; its interface is wonderful and intuitive; and most importantly, it delivers sound quality unmatched by any other digital source I’ve heard. The W20 brought out the best in my system, delivering the greatest dimensionality, timbral purity, resolution, and freedom from hash I’ve heard from digital sources." -Robert Harley, The Absolute Sound***********************************************************I agree with you that the Aurender is a very fine music server. I happen to have the Roon Nucleus going into the Audio Alchemy DMP-1 and then my Berkeley DAC.***********************************************************Go for it!
Once you have something ripped to a file, it can be converted by various programs. I have some downloads from DSD files converted to 24/176.4 or 24/88.2 PCM. I have some files where I have both the DSD file and 24/176.4 and one would be hard pressed to discern many, if any differences. Some people just want disc playback and I understand that. I never thought I'd leave physical media but about a dozen years back, give or take, I went to file playback and I'd never go back. My discs are in a closet and I try to buy downloads vs. physical media. I bought some CD storage boxes last year as I was running out of space in my furniture which holds my discs.
I happen to have the Roon Nucleus going into the Audio Alchemy DMP-1 and then my Berkeley DAC.