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This is a particularly interesting subject for me, since Frank sent one of his Insight DAC-preamp combos to use as a backup in case anything horrible went wrong in Rockville (other than the room). I'm going to give it a really close listen this weekend, although the transport I'll be using is part of an inexpensive AMC CD player that I've been using for 4 or 5 years. Purely on the basis of science (and not any subjective impressions people may have had comparing transports), what kinds of contraints does the transport impose? Why should I expect better sound from a more expensive transport?
The room acoustics and speakers make up almost all of what you hear. Ask any industry professional. This is, of course, assuming that the rest of the system doesn't have some sort of flaw.
Even a cheap CD player through a good DAC will offer a great listening experience through great speakers in a great room. If changing CD players makes a huge difference, there is something wrong with it, or your system is just really bad. It would take some horrible jitter to be audible, in which case that would fall into the "flawed" category.
The question is relative importance of components. Room is not a component.
At the risk of oversimplifying
Granted, this is a rather simplistic analysis
Not necessarily more expensive but better transport lets say. The transport drives the whole sound of your system. (not your speakers). The speakers are just an end product of it all. You can have either a very clinical bland digital sound or very musical more analog sound. This depends very heavily on the quality of your transport.
.If you look at it from that perspective, the importance of the speaker dwarfs the importance of all other components. The reason is that speakers are the least accurate components in a system. So if the goal is accurate reproduction, Do higher quality transports, preamps and amps make a difference? Of course they do, but not as much as some would believe. You could drive a $100 Big Box pair of speakers with a $10,000 amp and the results would likely be quite poor. But drive an appropriate $10,000 pair of speakers with a $100 amp and the sound would be surprisingly good. While I am not recommending the latter approach, it should serve to illustrate the point...speakers are by far the most important component in a sound system.Just a speaker builder's opinion...- Jim
1 Room2 Speakers3 Amp 4 Source
At the risk of oversimplifying, even a moderately priced receiver is rated at 20 Hz - 20 KHz +/- 0.1 db. Speakers, on the other hand, are generally rated at x Hz to x Hz +/- 3db...orders of magnitude less accurate.
The transport or cd player drives the whole sound. It can even make a bad amp sound way better, and make a bad pair of speakers sound better. Anything to do with the source can screw with your sound far more than anything else. Lousy cabling, transport, or dac can drag the system down to an unlistenable playback on a great pair of speakers...
This is a great way to view it, thanks.I just looked up specs on a bunch of Onkyo and Denon receivers, and most of them (even pretty expensive ones) say something like:Frequency Response: 10 Hz–60 kHz (+1 dB, -3 dB)How does one interpret this relative to your comment above?
You keep repeating this point, but I still haven't seen a reason or explanation for why this would be the case. My understanding is that a functional CD player outputting a digital signal will sound exactly the same as any other functional CD player. If you disagree, please provide a concrete reason or evidence for how they could possible sound different.
His comment stays the same, because he was using 20Hz - 20KHz (supposedly the range of hearing for a young person). Chances are, your equipment isn't going to reproduce 10 Hz to 60Khz (and you wouldn't hear it anyway).