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As you're looking for system advice you might want to broaden this out by posting in the Audio Central Circle, stating what budget you have, music tastes and they type of room you will be using. You will have a bigger audience and a broader range of opinions.To address part of your question: going used on equipment is a great way of getting more for your money and, in today's economy, audiophiles are offloading gear they no longer need.
Phillistine, thanks for your help. Did not know that the Duet had wireless issues. Would be willing to use a straight Ethernet connection, except that i like to use my computer while i listen to music. Is there a device that will create 2 jacks from one without using wireless?
Hi guys, Bigfish asked me to chime in. Indie, glad you were able to find the Duet at Circuit City closeout prices!!!! It is a very cool transport. You have received some great responses here, but I will offer my own too since I have owned or heard a lot of the equipment you are asking about.I believe that speakers are most important, because they are the highest distortion, and will flavor the system more than any other component. You can't cover up annoying speaker personality with a different source. That said, you have made a superb choice. The BE718 is a dynamite little speaker. With your big amps it will give you a lot of satisfaction for a long time. You have already bought the TAD gear which is also excellent so you are set there. You got the Duet for a great transport. Minimizing jitter is a possibility for you to explore, either in mods to your TADAC or with a jitter removal device between the transport and DAC. Empirical Audio, JISCO, are worth exploring among others you'll find when you start exploring those options. Wires are next. You mentioned anticable. I owned anticable copper ICs and Anticable speaker wires when I started. I have since upgraded. I found the anticable products to be good for beginner, definitely better than most extension cord type wires, but they are not good enough for the equipment you own. I would recommend midlevel JPS wires. Find a dealer near you and take some home for a free audition. Once you start using JPS you will never use anything else. They make less expensive versions of all kinds of wires so it needn't be too expensive. Another high value wire maker is groverhuffman.com. I use both of these brands in my system. It is fashionable to bash wires, but signal wires are as important as your amps. Spend the money when you can. But always try them at home before paying, or with money back guarantee. There are some companies that cater to this, usedcables.com, or something like that. You can usually resell used wires for same price you bought, but know what it's worth before you buy used. Power conditioning is important, but I would not use Haley with large power amps. In my house with a dedicated 20A outlet the Haley reduced the performance of tube and SS power amps, large and small. You might have a different experience. I have heard that Hydra and Shunyata can do the same thing with tube amps but I have not tried them myself. Filter type conditioners are frequently used successfully for filtering power to low current components like source or preamp. For high current sources, I prefer a magnetic power conditioner, something like Torus, BPT or Equitech. These use a large transformer to isolate noise and lower the source impedance of the power, giving you your own power generator with no high resistance connections between it and your system. They also provide a power reservoir allowing huge current transients. Do some reading there.I owned two Duets. I bought them the day they were announced for presale. They were delivered months before others started getting theirs. But both acted erratically with the remote control unit. The issue was the firmware for the remote. Logitech has finally fixed this issue andthe remote supposedly works well now. Be sure to get the latest version of SqueezeCenter. It contains the firmware for player and remote within it and will force an upgrade to those. You do need a wireless network in your house to use Duet. Supposedly the remote can connect to the player for its wireless connection, but last time I talked to Logitech they were frowning on that use, but coulda been due to the bad firmware. If you have a strong wifi access point then you can run the player wirelessly with no dropouts. Music streaming is not a high bandwidth chore and Duet has a 1.5 minute buffer on uncompressed wav. Give the wireless a try until you hear dropouts (music skips) then use a hard wire or upgrade your wireless router to Dlink 655Modwright TP cannot be used as external DAC, the digital input is disabled in the modding. It also can't be connected directly to your amps because the resistor volume pads are defeated too. But with a good preamp, it plays well. As you can tell from the long threads, it also benefits greatly from tube swapping, and the tubes that win are expensive. It is not a budget or beginner's product in my opinion. Your TADAC will get you up to speed to try more advanced gear soon enough.I would suggest that you get your new equipment running and dialed in before buying much more stuff. I don't know if this will resonate with you, but you can find a shortcut in picking what's best for you by using your gut. You will know when it feels right. Pay attention to your gut. If you have an uneasy feeling about something no matter what everyone esle says, stay away. Also consider that what's best for you now may not be best a year from now. You need to learn about your room, and yourself before you can appreciate finer equipment. Buying it first will frustrate and reduce your enjoyment. It is a artistic journey, not an applicance purchase. The system evolves over time as you learn more and more, that's the fun of it, as much as listening to music.
George is correct.... the digital input works absolutely great on the Transporter.... I haven't tried the outputs as there isn't much point given the nature of the product. The DAC/tube output stage is better than any other combo I've heard and very flexible for multiple inputs and sources. The Transporter also "technically" works fine straight into amps.... although doesn't always sound best this way.Mark
Thanks for replying to my post George, Mark and Ken. At the two G2Gs Ken mentioned, we tried using the digital coaxial input on Ken's modded TP, but it wouldn't work no matter what we tried. We used several digital transports like SB3, Sonos, several CDPs, Analysis Plus digicable... so we all assumed that the feature was defeated and it was pretty disappointing and didn't make sense. Could have been operator error, or maybe a malfunction in Ken's unit. Yes, we did set the input select. As for direct connect to amps, the stock TP has adjustable internal resistor pads in the output stage to reduce full scale output voltage to match various amp input sensitivities. This allows safe direct connection to amps and minimal loss of resolution from digital attenuation. Stock output stage is replaced on the Moddy of course, but the feature is not carried over. So if you connect the ModWright TP directly to an amp and turn down the digital volume to soft level, the sound quality will be reduced due to truncated data. This is common with any digital volume control. A ModWright Transporter should properly be used with a ModWright preamp anyway, right? Like chocolate and peanut butter... Here's one AC discussion about the attenuator pads that I remember. There may be others too.Rich
What about the Burson Buffer instead of a preamp?