Veri
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At least you're honest!We, delusional people test things in the system, and keep what sounds good to us.
At least you're honest!We, delusional people test things in the system, and keep what sounds good to us.
I don't remember mentioning ethernet and yes you can actually have different sounding dacs withe the same chip, as well as similar sounding dacs with different chips.
I have three DACs to test with at the moment. Sound difference is immediately noticeable.
Comparing CPUs is a good enough analogy - you have better single threaded performance with Intel and better multi-threaded performance with AMD.
So it is up to the dev to optimize even if you end up with comparable performance, the same way it is up to the developer of the Dac to properly implement a chip, a power supply, an ouput stage.
I am not comparing noise floors where I agree with you that it doesn't matter. Even if we say that a DAC's job is to turn 1s and 0s to electrical signal it does matter what's in the Dacs output stage. For example - changing the opamp in one of my DACs is giving different results - rolled off highs and better centering of the image. I can promise you it is not subtle at all when you play something harsh.
Anyway, if you don't hear a difference you can just listen to any Dac as long as it supports the necessary formats and has the required ouputs you need. We, delusional people test things in the system, and keep what sounds good to us.
If you listen to the same three songs over and over again and know which passage to listen to I don't think it is overestimating but good enough knowledge of the material. Of course I would measure the difference if I could.At least you're honest!but seriously if an opamp change would have such drastic changes in sound I would measure it after, and see what the actual effect is and not just trust me swapping things out and going by "memory". You are greatly overestimating yourself if you think your audio memory is worth that much.
... Of course I would measure the difference if I could.
How about an analogy with a pizza, or an aardvark, or a sermon instead?
An analogy with a CPU is a bit different, and one can do thousands of times of CDs data movement in a CPU compared to a DAC.
I guess we can argue that the DAC is multithreaded if it is playing left and right channels… sort of…
Some test that proves that the sound is different could be easier than coming up with analogies.
Lack of hardware to do it would be the prime reason.OK - what is stopping you?
Well yes, likely. I know AD797 amps are popular to swap in and they can be driven to oscillation relatively easy if the circuit does not fully support them. So then you might start to hear artifacting, and you might even like the sound of it. But it's a side effect then more then a performance boost. On paper, good opamps should all sound the same, it's more about cost/budget for the manufacturer, to pick the ones that are 'sufficient'. A good designer would try not to overengineer.There is a measurement on the forum of Opamp swapping and it doesn't show anything conclusive which can explain the changes in sound, hence logically everyone doing opamp swapping must me imagining things.
Lack of hardware to do it would be the prime reason.
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There is a measurement on the forum of Opamp swapping and it doesn't show anything conclusive which can explain the changes in sound, …
…, hence logically everyone doing opamp swapping must me imagining things.
And let's not forget the excellent E1DA COSMOSAn ADC is not cheap… but there are a few.
Topping may have one?
But mine is an RME.
There is also a PC/laptop using the mic input, which cab be an option.
To that end I didn't actually like what I heard with a burson. Tube swapping on the hand is a whole other story.Well yes, likely. I know AD797 amps are popular to swap in and they can be driven to oscillation relatively easy if the circuit does not fully support them. So then you might start to hear artifacting, and you might even like the sound of it. But it's a side effect then more then a performance boost. On paper, good opamps should all sound the same, it's more about cost/budget for the manufacturer, to pick the ones that are 'sufficient'. A good designer would try not to overengineer.
We, delusional people test things in the system, and keep what sounds good to us.
Of course I would measure the difference if I could.
Guess we're straying a lot from the main topic but what didn't you like about it then? It's just a basic AK4493S implementation with great performance parameters across the line really.I did buy an E30 ii based on measurements seen on this forum and didn't like the sound, but maybe it is just me.
And let's not forget the excellent E1DA COSMOS!
you keep contradicting yourself. So different CPUs are different, right? But they all produce 2+2=4. Maybe some are a nanosecond faster than others. Noone buys Intel vs AMD cpus because one is giving 2+2=5 vs the other giving 2+2=4, right? DACs are the same way. All chips perform up to spec. The specs are slightly different, to the point where no human can distinguish. If DACs would output different sounds we would know, first from measurements, and if the difference is big, maybe from out ears.I don't remember mentioning ethernet as affecting sound but merely as the source of the music and not being able do a proper comparison component for component. You can actually have different sounding dacs with the the same chip, as well as similar sounding dacs with different chips.
I have three DACs to test with at the moment. Sound difference is immediately noticeable.
Comparing CPUs is a good enough analogy - you have better single threaded performance with Intel and better multi-threaded performance with AMD.
So it is up to the dev to optimize even if you end up with comparable performance, the same way it is up to the developer of the Dac to properly implement a chip, a power supply, an ouput stage.
I am not comparing noise floors where I agree with you that it doesn't matter. Even if we say that a DAC's job is to turn 1s and 0s to electrical signal it does matter what's in the Dacs output stage. For example - changing the opamp in one of my DACs is giving different results - rolled off highs and better centering of the image. I can promise you it is not subtle at all when you play something harsh.
Anyway, if you don't hear a difference you can just listen to any Dac as long as it supports the necessary formats and has the required ouputs you need. We, delusional people test things in the system, and keep what sounds good to us.
Narrow soundstage, artificial precision (instruments sound like cutouts and not 3d like a tube sound but edgy and annoyingly harsh), very forward to the point of claustrophobic with acoustic singing.Guess we're straying a lot from the main topic but what didn't you like about it then? It's just a basic AK4493S implementation with great performance parameters across the line really.
Ok, let's say you are right and DACs perform up to spec, why then do we have a lineup of DACs with almost identical specs from Topping and SMSL and the people who listen to them find differences? Let's just get one and call it a day. Why bother to review and measure nearly identical DACs and have discussions in forums. I really don't care if I am using a Denafrips or a spaceship as long as it sounds good. This is not a brand thing. I didn't know Denafrips or Topping existed 6 months ago, I was listening to vinyl and was a happy camper.you keep contradicting yourself. So different CPUs are different, right? But they all produce 2+2=4. Maybe some are a nanosecond faster than others. Noone buys Intel vs AMD cpus because one is giving 2+2=5 vs the other giving 2+2=4, right? DACs are the same way. All chips perform up to spec. The specs are slightly different, to the point where no human can distinguish. If DACs would output different sounds we would know, first from measurements, and if the difference is big, maybe from out ears.
All in all, you are just fooling yourself, turning this into a cult.
Because they're chasing fairies and they don't know it! (the bit I bolded in your post)Ok, let's say you are right and DACs perform up to spec, why then do we have a lineup of DACs with almost identical specs from Topping and SMSL and the people who listen to them find differences? Let's just get one and call it a day. Why bother to review and measure nearly identical DACs and have discussions in forums. I really don't care if I am using a Denafrips or a spaceship as long as it sounds good. This is not a brand thing. I didn't know Denafrips or Topping existed 6 months ago, I was listening to vinyl and was a happy camper.
Narrow soundstage, artificial precision (instruments sound like cutouts and not 3d like a tube sound but edgy and annoyingly harsh), very forward to the point of claustrophobic with acoustic singing.
That being said, maybe in someone else's system it could sound great, but with my speakers and amp it was tiring to listen to.
Ok, let's say you are right and DACs perform up to spec, why then do we have a lineup of DACs with almost identical specs from Topping and SMSL
and the people who listen to them find differences?