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Quote from: mercman on 18 Jun 2009, 06:02 pmWith a Wavelength Cosecant V3 you will be in heaven, especially with high-rez material. ( Not that the improvement isn't easily heard with 44.1/16 stuff). You can read my review of Amarra at Computer Audio Asylum. Amarra works with AIFF. Just doesn't work with Apple Lossless and Flac yet.I just spoke with John at Sonic Studio and he said it wouldn't work with Mac AIFF.
With a Wavelength Cosecant V3 you will be in heaven, especially with high-rez material. ( Not that the improvement isn't easily heard with 44.1/16 stuff). You can read my review of Amarra at Computer Audio Asylum. Amarra works with AIFF. Just doesn't work with Apple Lossless and Flac yet.
Link to Amarra review:http://db.audioasylum.com/cgi/m.mpl?forum=pcaudio&n=52593&highlight=amarraAmarra works with AIFF. All of my files are AIFF. You misunderstood him.
I am interested in buying Amarra, however it doesn't work with my i/o (metric halo). This is strange since Amarra i/o are based on mh products.
Amarra does not work with Metric Halo products at this time.
Does the fact that MH make the Sonic gear somehow preclude MH devices from being 'approved'?
Quote from: cfmsp on 19 Jun 2009, 10:25 pmDoes the fact that MH make the Sonic gear somehow preclude MH devices from being 'approved'?Do you think Sonic will be unhappy if audiophiles spurn their gear to find the same performance in Metric Halo's pro audio equipment (with the music player software included) at half the price?
I wonder how the new Quicktime X technology embedded in Snow Leopard will affect Core Audio, and by extension Amara? Quicktime X is supposed to a pretty major overhaul, and I would imagine that all playback through iTunes, and Core Audio, ultimately runs through Quicktime.Rob
Do you think Sonic will be unhappy if audiophiles spurn their gear to find the same performance in Metric Halo's pro audio equipment (with the music player software included) at half the price?
Quote from: Moon Doggy on 22 Jun 2009, 09:40 pmDo you think Sonic will be unhappy if audiophiles spurn their gear to find the same performance in Metric Halo's pro audio equipment (with the music player software included) at half the price? From I've been told the MH and the Sonic Model 4 have different internals, slightly modified to meet Sonic Solution's requirements. Different firmware, different internal software processing. Plus, Amarra is not OEM'd to Metric Halo, so even if you buy the Metric Halo unit, you'd still have to buy Amarra to go with it, assuming they update support for the Metric Halo units.
Quote from: Moon Doggy on 22 Jun 2009, 09:40 pmQuote from: cfmsp on 19 Jun 2009, 10:25 pmDoes the fact that MH make the Sonic gear somehow preclude MH devices from being 'approved'?Do you think Sonic will be unhappy if audiophiles spurn their gear to find the same performance in Metric Halo's pro audio equipment (with the music player software included) at half the price?Apparently I missed whatever killed this thread, but would you mind being more specific WRT which MH equipment one can purchase for half the price and achieve the same level of performance? Have you made comparisons yourself?TIA.
Yes, the ULN-8 and Sonic Model 4 seem to be within $500 or less when you factor out Amarra. I'm not so sure of the major innerds differences; I was told they are minor. My $.02.Separate Amarra question: does anyone notice a slight upper bass or lower midrange hump (some would say "bloom') in the Amarra sound....all of the other clear benefits (top end, blackness, etc.) notwithstanding? I'm hearing it as I demo the new Ayre QB-9 DAC with it's MP (minimum phase) filter, and maybe the combo of the two are causing a little bloating there. Not bad, but noticeable enough for me.