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Guys:I want to say a very special thanks to Eric Hider of db Audio Labs for taking an hour of his time yesterday, on the telephone, to help me optimize my new Mac Mini with the Tranquility DAC. Talk about excellent customer service! I would also like to thank TimzTunz for calling me this afternoon and helping me chose the optimum settings in Pure Music. Prior to setting up the Mac Mini I transferred all of my .flac files to a W.D. Fire Wire External Drive and saved them in .aiff format. I also removed the stock internal hard drive in the mini (which contains 4 gb of ram) with a solid state drive. With help from guys on Computer Audiophile I was able to connect everything properly and obtain music from my speakers, prior to talking with Eric later in the day. How do you spell relief?
As I have mentioned before the greatest strength of the Tranquility is the absolutely natural, analog-like presentation of the music. I was immeresed in a huge 3-D soundstage with life-like image size and perfect placement with no image wander. Sibilants, always difficult for digital to get right (along with the harmonic series from cymbals) were stunning in their ease and timbral content. When was the last time you thought about the timbre of a sibilant or fricative? I was taken with the rightness of the soft 'ssss' sound that I have NEVER heard a digital system get right before. Cymbals had zero grain. Vocals were spot on. Dynamics, micro and macro were startling. The inner details were delicate and articulate... including ones that I had never heard before through my Cary 306 on software that I know, or at least thought I did, like the back of my hand (warts and all). Pace and timing is there in spades. It never seems to get ahead of or behind of the music. It has an uncanny way of allowing reverb tails and very soft sections to completely ring out and finish. Amazing! The word "music" sums it up for me. It is THE MOST MUSICAL digital gear that I have ever heard, and that is a lot of gear - pro and consumer.
OK, my turn.The last 3 months have pretty much sucked when it comes to music at my house. I sold all of my gear and started putting together a new system based on a music server. All of this has happened in the final stages of the world's longest kitchen remodel - I think it belongs in Guinness . Anyway, I have been listening to a much modded Gigawork DAC driven by the media computer that I built (cool unit... more on it later). Speakers have been some little Jordan JX92S fullrangers with vifa XT25 tweets (thanks for the X-over schematic, Sheldon). Not at all what I have been used to for the last 5 years.I think everyone has a good idea what I think of the Tranquility DAC based solely upon what I have heard at show and in other systems, never my own. I finally got my Tranquility DAC about 10 days ago, but I am in the final throes of the kitchen remodel and business has kept me busy. My friend Darrell McCombs has been looking to get a new DAC, so I thought it would be cool to let him audition the Tranquility and break it in for me, to boot. It proved to be a good thing all the way around. Seems like half of the Albuquerque bunch we hang out with has been over to listen to it, but I have just been slammed and tonight was the first night that I got to hear MY DAC, albeit in someone elses system.. not a bad thing - I know his system very well.It is Classe monoblocks driving B&W 802 Diamonds. Cabling is DCCA and Purist. The front end is a MAC Mini driving the DAC through a dB Audio Labs USB cable with level control being handled by a Denon HT processor. His room is well treated with absorption and diffusion. I have always found Darrell's system to be engaging, especially when spinning vinyl on the SOTA with a Zyx cartridge and head amp.Tonight, however, was a completely different experience. The Tranquility has ~ 100 hours on it and is well on its' way to being broken in. What was different about listening to Darrell's system tonight was that at no time did I long for vinyl instead of digital reproduction. As I have mentioned before the greatest strength of the Tranquility is the absolutely natural, analog-like presentation of the music. I was immeresed in a huge 3-D soundstage with life-like image size and perfect placement with no image wander. Sibilants, always difficult for digital to get right (along with the harmonic series from cymbals) were stunning in their ease and timbral content. When was the last time you thought about the timbre of a sibilant or fricative? I was taken with the rightness of the soft 'ssss' sound that I have NEVER heard a digital system get right before. Cymbals had zero grain. Vocals were spot on. Dynamics, micro and macro were startling. The inner details were delicate and articulate... including ones that I had never heard before through my Cary 306 on software that I know, or at least thought I did, like the back of my hand (warts and all). Pace and timing is there in spades. It never seems to get ahead of or behind of the music. It has an uncanny way of allowing reverb tails and very soft sections to completely ring out and finish. Amazing! The word "music" sums it up for me. It is THE MOST MUSICAL digital gear that I have ever heard, and that is a lot of gear - pro and consumer. Bottom line: I like it. I really, really like it alot... dB Audio Labs has redefined digital for me. Thanks, guys. Remarkable achievement! Dave
Thanks Dave for the loan of the DAC, and the kind comments above regarding the system. It's always nice to have you over, and to get constructive feedback from people with your level of knowledge.One minor correction re: my system - Instead of the Denon Processor, I am using a Pass Labs XP-10 Preamp. Eric, if you are reading this, keep up all the good work, and thanks for the advice with setting up the Mac Mini. This DAC is so detailed, yet so vinyl-like. Its quite an accomplishment...
Dave:My Tranquility DAC/Mac Mini System has just reached 100 hours on it and want to thank you for being able to express what I am also hearing. I find myself just absorbed into the music and for the first time not thinking about what I need to add or change next. Ken
Dave,Thanks again, and get that remodel done, when you spend some quality time with this dac, the impressions just grow stronger.-- Jim
I think it was in one of the HiRez forums I was browsing recently where I came across someone's experience with attenuators and digital and even though the application may have been different I thought I would try a pair of my unused attenuators on my Tranquility. This is not like anything I've experience with attenuators before-greater resolution and immediacy. The music has a livelier, more dynamic presentation with instruments more clearly defined. Any similar experiences?
Can someone explain what this tweak for the Mac means:Shutting down all other operating systems running in the back ground improves the sound (considerably).
A better way to put it is that all operational services - the ones that can potentially be running in the background - should be turned off, at least, or eliminated, at best.I'm a PC and have recently built a Windows XP based music server. XP is about 1.5GB when installed. Using nLite and then eliminating manually all unnecessary services and crapware I got it down to about 300MB before adding the music software, Firefox and a few other "essential" (to me) programs. By eliminating all of this baggage everything boots and works better and the sound quality is hugely improved.HTHDave
Come on Dave, get a Mini brother!
I heard Texans don't pack "Mini's".
Guys:There are reports surfacing that the latest Mac Mini with internal power supply is sonically superior to the previous models. I own a 2009 Mac Mini with a SS Internal Drive and 4 GB of Ram. Last night I discovered on the Apple Core Circle discussion about a tweak to make the 2009 and 2010 Mac Minis run as 64 bit machines. I followed this link: http://blog.leanopen.com/tag/64-bit/ I discovered my Mini is running as a 32 bit machine and will have to follow the instructions to make it run in the 64 bit mode. Many folks have performed the tweak and claim it makes a huge difference to sonic performance from the older Minis.I would like to know if any of you Tranquility Owners are running your Minis in the 64 bit mode and can report on the sonic differences between 32 bit and 64 bit?Thanks,Ken