Fair enough. I have Slack, Skype, Chrome, Spotify ... open. So you're saying people should have more apps open is what?Nope, I can assure you it happens on both OSX and linux, I have tested both. Probably refer back to previous posts around having apps holding the stream open.
Well its a temp solution, in work I use a linux laptop, no toslink and don't have an easy to setup equivalent to voicemeeter so I basically have spotify open all the time with a song paused. Otherwise, every 1 slack tick turns into 2 clicks.... not to mention all the others...Fair enough. I have Slack, Skype, Chrome, Spotify ... open. So you're saying people should have more apps open is what?
The AKM DACs have the velvet sound technology. I'm thinking the setting in AKM chip probably matches like this with DX3pro filters.
If someone thinks otherwise we can change it.
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Don't feel bad, I doubt any of those who claimed they could would pass a blinded test.Must be too old but I can't hear any difference
Must be too old but I can't hear any difference
Think I'll leave it to option two, 'Slow'. I think that's what my EL Dac used, too.
Unless the AKM implementations are that dramatic, doubt it is obvious from casual listening though.
The winding has burned out on the one channel allowing the voltage to rise to maximum. So that is "normal."
Do you have any headphones you can test that maybe have this problem too?
I'm not sure if it will help, but I just opened and plugged in a set of low impedance earbuds (Philips She3590), I was planning to let them play for a while to see if the right channel is affected at all.
In the meantime, I must say, the DX3 Pro is fantastic so far, loving the quality of sound and it drives everything in my signature on low gain so far...haven't tried to HE560 just yet, stay tuned.
In the meantime, I must say, the DX3 Pro is fantastic so far, loving the quality of sound and it drives everything in my signature on low gain so far...haven't tried to HE560 just yet, stay tuned.
I'm definitely intrigued if its high gain will be enough for the HE560. because at that point, why even consider a secondary amp
Nope, I can assure you it happens on both OSX and linux, I have tested both. Probably refer back to previous posts around having apps holding the stream open.... for want of a better word.
I think you (and several others) should follow your own advice. You seem to be slapping down people who are not as rabidly upset as you are. You have made your point - quite forcefully, dramatically, and insistently. You don’t like your unit, it does not meet your expectations. Return it. Let others now make up their own minds. You have posted enough times here that people will take your input into consideration. Otherwise it seems that you only will be satisfied when everyone gets into lockstep behind you. Sorry, not going to happen. You are already hearing that some are ok with the unit for their use case. Be gracious and tell them that you are happy for them. We already know where you stand on this unit.Again, it depends on peoples use case. Let them decide if its a deal breaker for them or not.
You are seeing complaints about your posts in this thread, and I am getting it in private just the same. Read your posts before submitting them. If they are editorial, complaining, etc., don't post them. It is just annoying to wade through them. Your issues are noted and all you are doing now is making enemies for yourself. I was just out walking in the field and even the deer complained about your posts!Thing is I've not told anyone how they should feel about their unit, quite the opposite if you actually read what you quoted. I think the patreon fan bois need to get off their high horses and stop dragging crap up from days ago.
I don't have my laptop in front of me but it does have both ALSA and pulseaudio on it, not sure what is active for the dac as I've not had a chance in work to delve too much, but it will be the default for phonon gstreamer, I suspect pulseaudio. But I think its working correctly, I am getting exclusive control and the clicks that go with it, its only when all streams stop the device will click and click again when it renegotiates the same sample rate.Do you know how your Linux desktop audio is configured?
I used my DX3 Pro via USB to a Raspberry Pi, which is a dedicated MPD player. Audio config is minimal ALSA: in other words, which ever application is using the audio device gets exclusive control. This obviously makes sense for this particular environment, since the computer itself is dedicated exclusively to MPD. And with this config, I have only expected clicking, i.e. unit startup/shutdown, and changing music sample rates. Stop/start playing, pause, music seek, etc: no clicking.
I believe most Linux desktop distributions ship with PulseAudio. ALSA is still there, but it's the lowest layer (drivers, mixers, some other low-level stuff). PulseAudio is a daemon that is supposed to simplify the communication between applications and the actual audio hardware (i.e. ALSA). I personally don't like PulseAudio, and always make a point to go out of my way to disable it on any system where I want to be sure of "bit perfect" playback, as PulseAudio (at least by default) will potentially molest your audio stream in any way it sees fit.
So I suspect you get clicking under Linux for the same reasons you get clicking under Windows. That is, a bunch of different applications all trying to use the same audio device, and the "intermediary" (PulseAudio, Windows mixer, etc) doing it's part to make everyone "play nice".
Depending on how much time and effort you want to put into it, you might be able to change your Linux sound config in such a way to get the best of both worlds, i.e. no clicking but still the ability to share the audio device. It's been many years since I've done this, but I'm pretty sure ALSA has builtin functionality that allows applications to share the audio device. The problem is, ALSA config is (IMO) not intuitive and poorly documented. (And I think that was one of the big drivers for creating PulseAudio, but why didn't they just put their effort into making ALSA easier to use?)
There's also JACK (JACK Audio Connection Kit), a sound daemon that has similar functionality as PulseAudio. JACK is much older, and was originally designed for low-latency audio applications (i.e. studio work). I played with JACK a bit back in college (nearly 20 years ago), but haven't touched it since.
And I think OSS (open sound system) is still being maintained. That actually pre-dates ALSA!
There are almost certainly more options of which I'm not aware.
To be clear, this is largely conjecture, but based on the fact that Linux allows you to tweak everything to the nth degree, I'm willing to bet there's a viable workaround. The biggest caveat though, is that some applications are dropping support for everything except PulseAudio. IIRC, one of the big browsers (Chrome or Firefox) only supports PulseAudio. So maybe the first step is to just play with PulseAudio a bit and see if there's a quick/easy win.