I did not manage to find a way to represent in frequency linear scale.
You'll find a lot of additional settings if open the chart settings by clicking the circled button:
I did not manage to find a way to represent in frequency linear scale.
Just tried to set up some overview listing regarding those heavy Denon CD players. Given specs are year and weight only, since they are easy to find
and totally uglyThe new Marantz SACD 10 is 33 kg
Thanks for the info, it looks indeed unobtainable, too bad. Searching for the disc, I found that Archimago talked about it and was able to get some tracks from DSD original files apparently (via Black Elk).
I'm not sure I would support this conclusion. The out-of-band noise for SACD mode looks very much like what you'd expect from DSD64, and it doesn't look like the DACs sport any post-filters to take care of it. Why CD-DSD conversion would seemingly engage one where plain SACD wouldn't is anyone's guess. Maybe they didn't want to spoil the "HD"? It obviously wouldn't matter for CD material which is inherently llimited to 22.05 kHz.
Speaking of noise, you may want to add some tones with heavily shaped dither to the arsenal, for CD-only players. This would give you a better estimate of true analog performance.
You can "dither away" the nonlinearities of crummy (multibit) DACs? I mean, it does make sense if you think about it, that's precisely what dither is for after all. It might be fun to see how far one can take it with heavily shaped dither.
True, but at least it gives you a decent idea of where the actual analog noise floor is.For CD players, it can only be done in audio band. So we can indeed increase the resolution locally, like in the mids, but at the expense of noise starting at 10kHz.
Good shaped dither can be found in unexpected places - try Audacity. I have also played with the "mda Dither" DSP plugin for Foobar2000, as well as Foobar's built-in dither (which is one of the best subjectively but may not be ideal for test signal purposes).I don’t have a tool to generate test tones with noise shaping, so that’s not possible for me at the moment.
Good shaped dither can be found in unexpected places - try Audacity. I have also played with the "mda Dither" DSP plugin for Foobar2000, as well as Foobar's built-in dither (which is one of the best subjectively but may not be ideal for test signal purposes).
And also from Multitone. Select desired test signal, then go to menu File->Save Test Signal... You can then chose number of channels, sample size and sample rate, and the desired length of the test signal.You can create and burn the test files yourself (from REW) or I could send you mine.
Thank you for the information, I updated my message accordingly.And also from Multitone. Select desired test signal, then go to menu File->Save Test Signal... You can then chose number of channels, sample size and sample rate, and the desired length of the test signal.
I guess you meant the DCD-720AE
My badNo, it is the DCD-700AE indeed. I’d guess you won’t find any 720 version made in Japan.
Wait, Denon is/was owned by the Volkswagen group back then?Well, that is because the Denon (its AL24 filter) recognizes the typical test tones and switches to a sharp filter in that case, which would make people like me (theoretically) happy. Fail