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Personally I've not found any real consistency in sound to say a NOS vs OS DAC is "better". Much has to do with the implementation. Here's a pretty good 1-pager discussing the purpose and methods for up/oversampling:http://www.resolutionaudio.com/papers/Up-Oversampling.pdf
Personally I've not found any real consistency in sound to say a NOS vs OS DAC is "better".
I find that the type of music played through each DAC can sometimes influence the listener. A simple song of guitar and voice, or perhaps a small chamber ensemble sounds best to me through the NOS DAC. But a high energy jazz or rock group with bigger dynamics, or very complex or dense music needs the OS DAC to pull it all out. The NOS DAC's I've heard tend to choke on overly complex or dynamic music.So, at least IMO, the type of music you listen to most often may play a role in what you prefer.Enjoy,Bob
I've tried the Monica II, that I owned for a while, and a few other NOS's that were brought over for me to listen to (I forget the names). In each case they were wonderful on simple stuff but not able to handle more complex or "big" music. They didn't compress as much as break up and muddy things.For the most part the analogue stages were very simple - caps direct out to the RCA's. Could be the problem, but I didn't hear the same breakup with non-NOS DAC's using this same simple analogue stage (i.e. Samsung or Technic's DVD/CD/SACD players that I modified some years ago). So I tend to think it's a natural characteristic of the DAC itself. Now I haven't really compared against those NOS DAC's that stack multiple DAC chips for a more refined sound. That might improve on the resolution over single NOS DAC chips. Don't know.Bob
I've tried the Monica II, that I owned for a while, and a few other NOS's that were brought over for me to listen to (I forget the names). In each case they were wonderful on simple stuff but not able to handle more complex or "big" music. They didn't compress as much as break up and muddy things.Bob
I have a Perpetual Technologies P-3A (with Modwright Level II mods), which by default upsamples to 24 bit, 96 kHz, but the upsampling can be disabled. This thread encouraged me to do a quick study, something I always wanted to do but never got around to - I've usually just left it in NOS mode.