0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 6407 times.
I'd like to find a NOS DAC for $400-$600 that.......A. Inputs USB, coax and optical if possible
Quote from: EDS_ on 9 Jan 2009, 04:41 pmI'd like to find a NOS DAC for $400-$600 that.......A. Inputs USB, coax and optical if possibleThe only one I can think of that does this in the price range of $400 - $600 is the MHDT Lab Paradisea, which is currently on version 3. There has been criticism in the past that this DAC converts USB -> SPDIF -> I2S rather than USB -> I2S direct, but I am not sure what the latest revision does as it is fairly new and there haven't been many posts about it that I can find.
Here is the deal with NOS DAC's:A good friend and customer did a lot of experiments and he reported this to me:Testing some 10 different DAC's (which his friends all brought over), he first drove them with fairly jittery sources; a transport and a stock AirPort Express. Every one of them sounded radically different, with the simple or NOS DAC's sometimes sounding the worst. BTW, Paradisea was one of them.Then he redid the same test with the same tracks, this time driving all the DAC's from a Pace-Car reclocker with AirPort Express as a source. This is a low-jitter source. This time he reported that all of the DAC's sound very similar, with the NOS and simple DAC's pulling slightly ahead.This makes perfect sense. The simpler DAC's are often based upon older D/A technology, such as the Philips TDA1541. These have little or no jitter reduction built-in, so they rely on the source having very low jitter. Also, once the jitter is eliminated, the simpler DAC's allow more music to come through undistorted since they dont incorporate digital filtering or many analog stages etc..This is why there are so many reports, both positive and negative about NOS and "simple" DAC's. The equalizer is a low-jitter source. If everyone had this, then the results would be more consistent.Now that I have my own "simple" DAC design, I am experiencing the same thing, although the receiver chip that I use does a pretty good job of jitter reduction. My philosophy has evolved a bit and I'm more inclined to design a really simple path now.Steve N.Empirical Audio