0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 10522 times.
there seems to be 3 ways to go here and that's 2 too many for a digital wannabe?? cdp in a box,,,dac & spinner,,,and transport with hd storage.Man,why is this stuff all over the place???? Is there a clear winner?? I am kinnda thinking a dac with spinner may be something to try.How is it you can use a piece of grap transport and get good sound into dac????Sorry for the dump question,trying to learn a new way?? thks Pat
What the Bryston does just off the top of my head from reading there website, that in addition to a dac, is it re samples a cd to a dvd level. This smoothes out or removes the harshness that is common in cd. And extracts all the detail that a cd is capable of.
Quote from: Mag on 10 Jan 2008, 01:38 amWhat the Bryston does just off the top of my head from reading there website, that in addition to a dac, is it re samples a cd to a dvd level. This smoothes out or removes the harshness that is common in cd. And extracts all the detail that a cd is capable of.Right. Before the Bryston BCD-1, NOBODY was hearing "all the detail that a cd is capable of." Harshness isn't "common in cd"; it's common in digital components.
Quote from: BrianM on 10 Jan 2008, 01:01 pmQuote from: Mag on 10 Jan 2008, 01:38 amWhat the Bryston does just off the top of my head from reading there website, that in addition to a dac, is it re samples a cd to a dvd level. This smoothes out or removes the harshness that is common in cd. And extracts all the detail that a cd is capable of.Right. Before the Bryston BCD-1, NOBODY was hearing "all the detail that a cd is capable of." Harshness isn't "common in cd"; it's common in digital components.Brian, From your comment, I gather you think highly of the Bryston, and I see that you also own the AVA Ultra DAC. Would you care to compare these?
wally, i guess we need to hear back from brianm - i interpreted his comments as being sarcastic. not that he's heard the bryston & disliked it, but more that he thinks the comments about it are over the top, & that many folks are hearing good digital before this particular piece...
but, per my prior stated beliefs there's only so much that can be had from the redbook cd medium.
A real nice fellow phoned last night with a few options on new gear.The cdp he had was 30k dollars modded.Best cdp in the world.Must be some good stuff,32 bit dac,high mods. He also highly spoke on the AMR cdp at 8k bucks.And here i thought the economy was slow,man i don't know sh-t.
Quote from: doug s. on 10 Jan 2008, 02:25 pmwally, i guess we need to hear back from brianm - i interpreted his comments as being sarcastic. not that he's heard the bryston & disliked it, but more that he thinks the comments about it are over the top, & that many folks are hearing good digital before this particular piece...Correct...Quotebut, per my prior stated beliefs there's only so much that can be had from the redbook cd medium.To answer Wally's question about the AVA DAC, I would just say that the "so much" to be had from redbook cd is indeed much. Standard CDs are 16-bit; the issue, IME, is not whether 16-bit is enough, it's whether your DAC is actually giving you all 16-bits, 100% of the time. To my knowledge the AVA DAC is the only real 16-bit parallel processor DAC around.This isn't to say that 24-bit CDs couldn't be meaningfully superior to redbook -- though based on what I've heard that's at least debatable, and how much of this depends on the quality of conversion??? -- but that redbook CDs aren't generally as bad as people assume. In fact they're quite good, and to me can sound every bit as "liquid" as an LP (with superior dynamics and none of the noise of course). As to whether it's worth the extra dough, that's always subjective. For me it was. Aside from the number of bits, a great deal depends on the analog stage, too. Recent improvements to the Van Alstine DAC, for example, have been, AFAIK, primarily concerned with the "A" half of "D/A". Given that these improvements have been significant, that could suggest something about the unrealized potential of many CD players. People underrate the importance of the power supply and transformer, for example.Anyway if you're interested, Frank explains his approach in this thread:http://www.audiocircle.com/index.php?topic=30360.0
I suspect (or is it just wishful thinking?) that I can get 95% of what's to be had from a CD without spending much more than $2000.
"...I suspect (or is it just wishful thinking?) that I can get 95% of what's to be had from a CD without spending much more than $2000....
I think it depends on the rest of the system. With an outstanding system, $1,000 normally spent will install a serious limit. In a system proportionally allocated, $1,000 is probably plenty.
sooo,if i understand right,a good dac with any old transport will do 90% what a 30k dollar cdp will do???? That can't be right?? I like the % way of getting to the bottom of things as it's something we all can get straight.Not sure i have this right as i only dwell in single box players.