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I know this is going to be very speculative at this point, but just by looking at the chip and technical specs of the forthcoming DAC, do you think it will hold its own against the stiff competition in the $1k range (Lavry, PS Audio, Benchmark, Apogee, Grace, Aqvox, Cambridge, Havana, ....).
In other words - could the high quality chip we hampered by the fact that the rest of the unit is built to a very competitive price point?
Different question: What would be the "best" method of feeding a signal - USB, Toslink? I am currently planning a modest music server / HT setup (feeding a Rowland amp) and might start out with an Airport Express with Toslink Out into DAC, hence the question.
Hi Jon,After the low pass filter, the analog signal will be fed to the tube or ss amp stage by a selector switch. Alex
Quote from: bravophase on 31 Oct 2009, 08:25 amHi Jon,After the low pass filter, the analog signal will be fed to the tube or ss amp stage by a selector switch. AlexWhat is cut frequency (-3dB)? Can LPF be user programed?Tell more power supply to the chip. I hope it is discrete supply, not 7805 or 1117-3.3 crap for everything.
Back to the original topic....could Alex or anyone in the know explain to me the benefit of using an non-defeatable, analogue potentiometer for volume control instead of the DAC's internal volume control? Doesn't the former typically degrade sound quality if not extremely well executed?Just curious about the reasoning... Thanks!
Quote from: aloft on 14 Dec 2009, 05:40 pmBack to the original topic....could Alex or anyone in the know explain to me the benefit of using an non-defeatable, analogue potentiometer for volume control instead of the DAC's internal volume control? Doesn't the former typically degrade sound quality if not extremely well executed?Just curious about the reasoning... Thanks!