They cutted wires at 10 o’clockWhat are those two red bypasses for?
Wow, I have one coming Friday. I will disassemble and see if it is the same.The conventional pattern that connects to 3.5 mm is cut at the red circle in the photo and connected directly from the RCA input pin to 3.5 mm with a red wire.
R-ch and L-ch are exchanged by this wiring. If you are an amateur, this correction method is acceptable, but it is a terrible correction method as a method that the company does.
Voltage gain vs. volume position graph, Level sweep graph and Internal photo.
They replaced another 3.5 socket connector, so easy to fix corectAdd a photo.
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In my A04, purchased in February 2022, they had already restored the gain to over 30dB https://www.audiosciencereview.com/...ni-liquid-music-system-with-aiyima-a04.31435/While you are at it few more questions. For your May22 A07:
1. Does the volume pot seems to be linear pot(old) or log pot (what should have been used from the start)
2. Do you notice reduced input sensitivity or power (may only notice if you have used older A07 that actually shown differences in these area)?
3. When you have a chance can you post some internal pics of your May22 Amazon A07??
Q#2 is because I brought one of the last A04 too right before they disappeared from Amazon (at a much reduced price too if that matters). And it has very low input sensitivity and/or reduced power which many people already reported/complained about. Aiyima added PFFB for those A04 and noise is greatly reduced but with much lower input sensitivity. Wonder if they did similar tricks to newer A07 while they were fixing the 3.5mm jack issue.
Thank you!!
I was in a Hi-Fi shop in Albuquerque a few years ago with a friend and we were talking with a the salesman about some new streaming units, Class D amps and how things have changed since the 1970’s. I proceeded to make a JOKE about the green CD edge markers and he just said “yeah, that was a good tweak” (or something similar). He was serious. I was floored that there are still people out there that actually believe that that marker actually made their CDs sound better.Don't get me started - it was Lingo vs, Armageddon really, the Valhalla was gospel right from launch and I lost count of the Nirvana kits I retro-fitted (any who don't know what the hell I'm going on about, please don't bust a gut to find out )
No idea about moving mains switches around (I thought I knew most of the crap about this deck since I first used one in 1975, bought my first of several in 1976 and then sold and set them up from 1977, the last one done eighteen months or so ago with a Karousel bearing - nice bit of plumbing that, but it does up nice and tight to the new sub chassis one really needs for it ).
Around the time of my 'epiphany' in the very late 80's, another thing that finished it was a friend putting the green pen around an LP record and we both 'heard' a difference - FFS!!!!! The only 'difference really is playing a track twice in a matter of minutes or less before the vinyl has recovered (it was suggested to me the vinyl in an LP takes ten minutes to fully 'recover' after the stylus has played it - no evidence though but it made me more careful in dems). As for green penning a CD - yep, I stil bear the scars and at least it doesn't seem to have harmed the discs afflicted with it. I put the 'difference' down to some laser units being marginal in their disc reading being 'helped' by the green pen spiel but it's probably a load of bollix frankly and not sure if anyone actually analysed the reading of a given disc before and after. What WAS an issue though were discs not made to full red book standard back then, but I'm digressing really badly here - with apologies.
Back then I did too and recently played a disc I'd green penned thirty years back.I was in a Hi-Fi shop in Albuquerque a few years ago with a friend and we were talking with a the salesman about some new streaming units, Class D amps and how things have changed since the 1970’s. I proceeded to make a JOKE about the green CD edge markers and he just said “yeah, that was a good tweak” (or something similar). He was serious. I was floored that there are still people out there that actually believe that that marker actually made their CDs sound better.
CD demagnetizers and storing your CDs in a freezer for better sound were also a thing. If you used all three tricks, must've sounded amazing indeed...I was in a Hi-Fi shop in Albuquerque a few years ago with a friend and we were talking with a the salesman about some new streaming units, Class D amps and how things have changed since the 1970’s. I proceeded to make a JOKE about the green CD edge markers and he just said “yeah, that was a good tweak” (or something similar). He was serious. I was floored that there are still people out there that actually believe that that marker actually made their CDs sound better.
Personally I would dial back the amp a little. Just because the end of a potentiometer tends to be less accurate then somewhere in between. And I think having to have less attenuation from the DAC can be a good thing too (bigger signal on the output gives a higher S/N ratio).I am using the Topping E30 DAC with Aiyima a07; Is there any advantage or disadvantage sonically and or electronically with having the Amp near to max volume and using the DAC to attenuate volume, or having the amp dialed back some and using the DAC once again to attenuate the volume? Or is it six of one and half a dozen of the other? Is this a ridiculous question?
Much obliged @RHO, sounds like a plan!Personally I would dial back the amp a little. Just because the end of a potentiometer tends to be less accurate then somewhere in between. And I think having to have less attenuation from the DAC can be a good thing too (bigger signal on the output gives a higher S/N ratio)
i think it's best in this price rangeHow does this one compare to SMSL AD18 or SMSL SA300? Anything better in this price range?
it is like 30% cheaper than those two, and perform probably just as good. You can't find anything better in its price range (if there was, it'd be hugely popular)How does this one compare to SMSL AD18 or SMSL SA300? Anything better in this price range?
Yes no recommendation from Amir. Also it was from 2019. If anything you can be sure hifi equipment from Chinese makers obsolete fast (as new versions come out like every 6m)AD18 has never been very highly regarded from what I've read.