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This thread caught my eye and I felt compelled to push my own agenda. =)I've gone through the Benchmark, CityPulse, Zhaolu, etc. DACs. To my ears they are thin, hyper analytical, incredibly fatiguing and harsh.As long as your preamp or integrated has a minimum 20K input impedance, I'd get an AudioSector DAC. They are excellent and there are plenty of positive reviews from Bucky and Pardales and others here and on Audiogon.You might want to put the MHDT Paradisea+ on your list too.
The Benchmark is a standard in the recording and broadcast industry for good reason. In my studio we track with ProTools HD at sample and bit rates many times what the recording will eventually be delivered at. The DAC-1 gives us faithful playback from the tracking to the mastering. Abbey Road now uses Benchmark throughout the studio.
Also consider the $899 TADAChttp://forum.audiogon.com/cgi-bin/srch_fr.pl?tadac&zzANY
The AudioSector DAC looks like a very interesting, but odd recommendation. I'm sold on the quality of this DAC, but given the conversion rate of the Euro to dollar all the features for this puppy would cost be over $1,600 without the car battery. Is the cost of the parts for this DIY DAC really worth that much? Plus, its presentation is horrible in that its on a piece of wood - yes apparently the wood contributes to the sonics, but $1,600 US for some parts on a piece of wood? Would love to hear it and was actually contemplating buying one until I saw the actual price.
Quote from: tcsubwoofer on 29 Nov 2008, 02:44 pmThe AudioSector DAC looks like a very interesting, but odd recommendation. I'm sold on the quality of this DAC, but given the conversion rate of the Euro to dollar all the features for this puppy would cost be over $1,600 without the car battery. Is the cost of the parts for this DIY DAC really worth that much? Plus, its presentation is horrible in that its on a piece of wood - yes apparently the wood contributes to the sonics, but $1,600 US for some parts on a piece of wood? Would love to hear it and was actually contemplating buying one until I saw the actual price. Slight mistake here tcsubwoofer. Your talking about the Altmann Attraction Dac. I believe the AudioSector Dac is sold in the USA and is considerably cheaper and I'm sure it doesn't require a 12V battery. Cheers, jaspal
As for the Benchmark's popularity in recording studios, my guess is that the DAC is a tool, one tool among many that a sound or recording engineer may use to help them engineer a track. The Benchmark's hyper detail is no doubt very, very useful.
I have heard that the benchmark is often used in the recording industry. This brings up an interesting question - why would a DAC which is considered capable of producing a neutral, faithful reproduction from tracking to the mastering by a recording engineer then be considered so fatiguing or grainy by others in the audiophile community?
As for the Benchmark's popularity in recording studios, my guess is that the DAC is a tool, one tool among many that a sound or recording engineer may use to help them engineer a track. The Benchmark's hyper detail is no doubt very, very useful. Whether the same recording engineer would go home and prefer to listen to a Benchmark over some other well regarded DAC in his or her home stereo system is I think a relevant question. Whether his or her home stereo would be representative of something an audiophile might have is, I think, an interesting question too.
Confirming what MusicMan06 and jaspal are saying. The Altmann Attraction is a NOS DAC, lists for around $1600, is battery powered, and is not a DIY kit. The AudioSector NOS DAC is typically sold as a DIY kit and can be purchased for less than $400. A nicer case for the AudioSector rather than a plain wood board can be had for less than $200 more. For more information, go to the AudioSector site and email Peter Daniel.
Hey KS, do you have this DAC? I've never considered a tube DAC seriously, but this has many great reviews at audioreview, a volume knob, remote, and Balanced XLR outs. I emailed Paul Grzybek on Friday and we've already exchanged 3 emails. I love companies with attentive service like this. There is a sale happening as well at $899 for the DAC before he raises the prices back to the $1,300 range in a few weeks. I am a little turned off by Paul's pricing structure in that he lists the unite for $3,799 retail, but on sale for $1,299, or scratch and dent for $899. Huge price swings like this diminish credibility, although the reviews and features of this unit seem to make it a value at $899. Unless my research persuades me otherwise I am very likely to purchase this DAC on Monday. I'm going to have to take a plunge and get started with a DAC one of these days.