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Installed V-caps as well in my Promitheus Buffer. Have about 200Hrs so far. The sound has gone from very good to where is my hammer. I will wait until I have 500Hrs on them and report back.
If you still have the OPA2604 in the original paradisea, you really should change that to the LM4562 as Legarem suggested, it makes a huge difference, the OPA2107 is too bright for my taste.
Quote from: rollo on 27 May 2007, 11:41 pmInstalled V-caps as well in my Promitheus Buffer. Have about 200Hrs so far. The sound has gone from very good to where is my hammer. I will wait until I have 500Hrs on them and report back.Are those the Teflon or OIMP V-Caps? Bummer about the break-in process.Quote from: shooter on 28 May 2007, 01:17 amIf you still have the OPA2604 in the original paradisea, you really should change that to the LM4562 as Legarem suggested, it makes a huge difference, the OPA2107 is too bright for my taste.Thanks for the heads up on the OPA2107 as I have one but haven't installed it. Bright is not where I want to go with the Paradisea.
Consider what causes jitter in the first place, even with the extra conversion level, the signal path is so short (the physical length the signal is going to exist as s/pdif), that unless MHDT really messed their design up badly somehow, the benefits of being able to use USB for getting the signal to the DAC outweigh the possibility of jitter caused by this extra conversion, which would be very minimal compared to using s/pdif over exponentially larger distances (like from source to DAC).The only reason NOT to use USB, would not be whether it goes to I2S or not directly, but for electrical isolation from the PC... even USB straight to I2S is going to have that problem, maybe more maybe less, but I don't know how sensitive I2S is to that vs the way MHDT does it...I use a DIP to isolate my PC from my MHDT, I don't have a USB version to compare it to though.
Oh, maybe you guys will know the answer to my question. When you plug the Paradisea+ into the USB, what does the computer detect it as? 16-bit 44.1khz? Or something else?I've been told that you can't play files of a higher quality than 16-bit 44.1khz through the USB connection, but you can play up to 24-bit 96khz through the SPDIF. Is that true?If the Paradisea+ is 16-bit, then how is it able to play 24-bit 96khz at all? Does it lessen the quality of the source to do this? Is it dithered/downsampled? Does it create distortion or noise?I ask these questions because I regularly listen to/work with DVD-quality audio, in addition, of course, to CD audio.Thanks so much for your help!!!
"The GW Labs DSP is what I use (tried both this and the Monarchy, kept the DSP)"I purchased the Monarchy DIP 48/96 Upsampler to go with the Paradisea+. After trying the Paradisea+ with and without the upsampler, I found that the music sounded much better WITH the upsampler. Please tell me why you prefer the GW Labs DSP over the Monarchy DIP 48/96 Upsampler?
Hello Newbuyer, hello Oscillate, I have a question for you both -You are both upsampling your music before sending it to your Paradisea. In your opinion then do you feel the upsampling is better than non-oversampling? Would you have been better served to get an upsampling DAC, if you're just now upsampling it anyway? I ask because I am presently trying to decide whether to get the Paradisea+, but am deterred because of its lack of support for 24/192, when it seems that this will be necessary if I wish to listen to the next generation of audio (DVD-A, SACD, Blu-Ray, HD DVD, etc.)Also, do you know whether the Paradisea+ can accept HDCD signal? Thank you!
I have read that. It didn't really help me any - maybe because I don't understand it? Can you explain? Thanks!