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Have you heard SACD on a player that does straight DSD playback?Many don't and use a variety of different conversion techniques. That mightbe part of it. Also, just because something is recorded at a higher resolution,if the mastering is lousy, it will still sound lousy.
I have to say that owning a pair of MartinLogan reQuests smooth out any digital harshness at my house. To me there are as many bad and good sounding albums in either format.Wayner
Personally, I'd rather have great digital than mediocre analog.
Unless you are buying remasters of old albums recorded in analog, any newvinyl you are buying today was recorded digital.
Quote from: TONEPUB on 24 Jan 2009, 11:58 pmPersonally, I'd rather have great digital than mediocre analog.agreed, but then I'll take great analog over great digital !
To me there are as many bad and good sounding albums in either format.
SACD is definately the best of the Hi-res digital. AND it can sound really good. However, I would not place it ahead of best vinyl. When I compare my best SACD recording with either the Vanguard 180 gram remasters or the Club 497 direct analog recordings from Fone--well there is just no comparison. The vinyl is such much better it is scary. But you pay upwards of $30 a record for these recordings, and Vanguard is now out of business. The Fone vinyls are 45 RPM, single sided 240 gram. The noise floor on these is equivalent to SACD.If I compare apples to oranges (old vinyl to new SACD) then it takes a really virgin record to equal the quality and a superb setup. My Koestsu Urushi played through a EAR 324 the does the trick though. The other point is that high frequency presence really depends on the speakers. I use Lowther drivers in Terasonic cabs, and although there are trade-offs, these are the most revealing speakers I've ever heard.
I'd say you ARE crazy....for not having spare tubes on hand!!