• WANTED: Happy members who like to discuss audio and other topics related to our interest. Desire to learn and share knowledge of science required. There are many reviews of audio hardware and expert members to help answer your questions. Click here to have your audio equipment measured for free!

Sound quality of PC and laptop headphone/line outputs

captain paranoia

Active Member
Joined
Feb 9, 2018
Messages
293
Likes
218
In Another Place, someone asked for advice on whether to use a streaming DAC or a USB DAC to connect to a laptop to provide audio for a study/kitchen. Driven by lossy streaming sources.

There was clearly the assumption that the analogue output from PC/laptops/tablets/phones is so bad that it is not really worth considering.

My subjective view (from a cheapskate, non-audiophile point-of-view), is that this isn't universally true. I have used the basic audio output from PC, tablets, phone, etc. to drive my hi-fi, and have generally been happy. I have never done any A/B tests, or any measurements.

I have found poor performance from a cheap portable CD (a Philips unit with very muddy sound), but also very good performance from a cheap portable CD (a Sony unit I bought for 99p in a charity shop).

I recently connected a Linx 7 tablet (that I bought second hand for £25) to my hi-fi, and was impressed with how that sounded.

I can hear the difference between a good MP3 (EAC VBR0) and the original FLAC (done blind), so I'm not completely deaf.

So I guess the question is: Has anyone done proper measurements on PC/laptop/tablet/phone audio outputs (I did look...)? Are they really so bad that they all need replacing with an external DAC, even when playing lossy format media?
 

DonH56

Master Contributor
Technical Expert
Forum Donor
Joined
Mar 15, 2016
Messages
7,835
Likes
16,497
Location
Monument, CO
I did some a few years ago but probably could not find the results. The sound card in my old desktop sucked, errr, exhibited poor performance, so I bought an external version that was much better. Mainly for the lower noise floor, less so distortion, though the internal card didn't have enough output (so had high distortion because I was pushing it).

We built a game system for my son years back and the integrated audio was essentially equal to the fancy sound card he bought. So yeah it depends and I have not done any research to see which ones have better audio (my media room PC is my laptop for surfing and SONOS control, not plumbed to the system unless I am running tests).

OTOH, how much quality is needed to hear the music over the mixer in the kitchen?
 
OP
C

captain paranoia

Active Member
Joined
Feb 9, 2018
Messages
293
Likes
218
I'm trying to establish if the enquirer in the Other Place has actually tried the analogue output of their laptop...

Next question will be to see if they have tried feeding a decent media source to their laptop output, and whether they've fed the output into a decent amp and speakers.

Just trying to isolate where their limitation actually lies...
 

Dimitri

Senior Member
Joined
Jan 28, 2018
Messages
365
Likes
426
Location
Valencia California
There will always be "some guy" at "another place" saying "stuff".
Don put it best: "how much quality is needed to hear the music over the mixer in the kitchen?"

Connect whatever you have available and if you don't like it, start thinnng about improvements.
An external DAC on lossy source will only get you that far. And even with the perfect speakers (that don't exist) you still end up with a very accurate sound of a lossy source - Hmmm... :)

As for "Are they really so bad that they all need replacing with an external DAC, even when playing lossy format media?"
On the whole above question the answer is: Of course not.
It depends on the "quality" of the MP3s, the laptop's sound interface, what speakers the laptop is feeding, and the size of the kitchen

I'm sure it's all crystal clear now :)
 

amirm

Founder/Admin
Staff Member
CFO (Chief Fun Officer)
Joined
Feb 13, 2016
Messages
44,368
Likes
234,386
Location
Seattle Area
I have measured and post a few graphs of my everyday HP laptop in this review thread: https://audiosciencereview.com/foru...of-shozy-alien-digital-audio-player-dap.2058/

index.php

As you see there, while it doesn't put external DACs out of business, the performance is quite good. Indeed I have performed countless critical listening tests using it.

My sense, without much data :D, is that the problem has improved versus years back. Ultimately though measurements are needed to confirm good performance.
 
Last edited:

amirm

Founder/Admin
Staff Member
CFO (Chief Fun Officer)
Joined
Feb 13, 2016
Messages
44,368
Likes
234,386
Location
Seattle Area
With removal of headphone jack from some phones like Google Pixel 2 and iPhone, the situation will turn into how good the performance of external dongles are. I have one to test that Google sells for Pixel 2. I will measure it at some point.
 
OP
C

captain paranoia

Active Member
Joined
Feb 9, 2018
Messages
293
Likes
218
There will always be "some guy" at "another place" saying "stuff".

I'm trying to be quite politic here... I've tried to gently make the same comments you have:

- lossy compression is likely to dominate any limitations of the audio output
- start with the existing analogue output, fed into a decent system, with decent source material
- see if the audio output of the laptop is good or rubbish

Only then, start looking at alternative external DACs. Of course, if you want a networked renderer, then you'd need to look for an external unit.

As above, my experience with built-in DACs is mixed, but mostly positive.

As someone who believes in evidence-based statements, I thought I'd ask here for the evidence that I suspect will support my experience, rather than the unscientific nonsense that tends to to get repeated in forums like the 'Other Place'...

Sadly, I'm something of a lone voice there, as most of the advice is about spending money on esoteric bits and bobs, rather than actually trying to address the actual issue with a rational series of questions and investigation.
 
Last edited:

Dimitri

Senior Member
Joined
Jan 28, 2018
Messages
365
Likes
426
Location
Valencia California
Sadly, I'm something of a lone voice there, as most of the advice is about spending money on esoteric bits and bobs, rather than actually trying to address the actual issue with a rational series of questions and investigation.

It doesn't sound like a fun place to hang out :)
 

Blumlein 88

Grand Contributor
Forum Donor
Joined
Feb 23, 2016
Messages
20,522
Likes
37,050
Don't have time right now to post graphs. But I've measured a few laptop outs. An older Lenovo T410 is one. Good not great. Plenty good for all except the most demanding purposes.

Dynamic range is the weakest part being 88 db. 1 khz distortion has 2nd harmonic at -97.5 db and 3rd harmonic at - 94.0 db no other harmonics above the noise floors. Twin tone IMD is -93.7 db at the 1 khz difference tone from max with this demanding test tone. You can feed the headphone out with an adapter into a preamp playing it over a home system of good quality and sound isn't bad at all.

Even this several year old laptop can be set to work at 24 bit and all the normal sample rates up to 192 khz.

I don't have measurements handy for a desktop server I have. Has an integrated motherboard sound card. As I recall it was similar to the above laptop. Just a little lower noise floor thru the rear outputs. Similar distortion levels. In general you wouldn't listen to it and declare it bad sounding.
 

Palladium

Addicted to Fun and Learning
Joined
Aug 4, 2017
Messages
630
Likes
769
Correct me if I'm wrong, but the $0 HP onboard DAC aka "audiophile reviled garbage" seems to outperform Schitt Multibit in that 1KHz test.

It will really be sad and funny if some poor unsuspecting guy went to the usual believer forums asking for an upgrade from onboard PC audio, drank their Kool-Aid only to pay so much more for worse performance.
 

March Audio

Master Contributor
Audio Company
Joined
Mar 1, 2016
Messages
6,378
Likes
9,317
Location
Albany Western Australia
My Sony SVP112A laptop

0dBFS - reasonable harmonic distortion but low output voltage
upload_2018-3-3_14-12-7.png



-90.31dBFS 24bit waveform - Fairly Noisy
upload_2018-3-3_14-12-59.png


Noise floor - quite high
upload_2018-3-3_14-14-0.png
 

March Audio

Master Contributor
Audio Company
Joined
Mar 1, 2016
Messages
6,378
Likes
9,317
Location
Albany Western Australia
Intel Skull Canyon NUC

0dBFS - Low output voltage and high harmonic distortion
upload_2018-3-3_16-30-1.png


-90.31dBFS 24bit waveform - Noisy
upload_2018-3-3_16-32-32.png


Noise Floor - High with an odd spurious tone at 19kHz
upload_2018-3-3_16-33-25.png
 

Cosmik

Major Contributor
Joined
Apr 24, 2016
Messages
3,075
Likes
2,180
Location
UK
According to Archimago:
The iPhone 6's DAC measures very well up to the maximum 48kHz samplerate....
...Given the measurements I'm seeing, the iPhone's DAC is excellent and can produce very accurate output.
Seeing as most DACs (even the ones in 'audiophile' boxes) are standard chips wired up with a few components as per the data sheet, and truly mass-produced devices are likely to be designed by professionals to perform well in terms of EMC, there's no reason that a PC or tablet output shouldn't be getting there in terms of the measurements.
 

SchwarzeWolke

Member
Forum Donor
Joined
Feb 7, 2018
Messages
94
Likes
82
For me the two only reasons for ditching the PC output and going via an USB DAC are 1.) need for more power and 2.) need for lower output impedance. With all the fancy IEMs with multiple BA drivers around, some need an output impedance of essentially 0 Ohm. I will soon get my first custom made IEM and for them I also need an output impedance <0.5 Ohm.
 

March Audio

Master Contributor
Audio Company
Joined
Mar 1, 2016
Messages
6,378
Likes
9,317
Location
Albany Western Australia
Ipad Mini 3

0dBFS - Not too bad distortion but could be better, low output voltage
upload_2018-3-3_18-16-45.png


-90.31dBFS - Not too bad but still fairly noisy
upload_2018-3-3_18-18-5.png

upload_2018-3-3_18-18-35.png


Noise Floor - Not too bad
upload_2018-3-3_18-19-29.png
 

Attachments

  • upload_2018-3-3_18-12-49.png
    upload_2018-3-3_18-12-49.png
    159.4 KB · Views: 160
  • upload_2018-3-3_18-13-50.png
    upload_2018-3-3_18-13-50.png
    162.5 KB · Views: 147
  • upload_2018-3-3_18-14-18.png
    upload_2018-3-3_18-14-18.png
    135.2 KB · Views: 154
  • upload_2018-3-3_18-15-17.png
    upload_2018-3-3_18-15-17.png
    132.7 KB · Views: 163
Last edited:

Cosmik

Major Contributor
Joined
Apr 24, 2016
Messages
3,075
Likes
2,180
Location
UK
Last edited:

Cosmik

Major Contributor
Joined
Apr 24, 2016
Messages
3,075
Likes
2,180
Location
UK
Hauwei P10+
-90.31dBFS 24 bit waveform - OMFG! Cant be right. What have I done wrong???
It looks awfully like a 16 bit sine wave, perhaps with some phase shift (minimum phase filter..?)

For example, some DAC or other producing a -90dB sine wave from 16-bit data:
107TRAFIG05.jpg
 

svart-hvitt

Major Contributor
Joined
Aug 31, 2017
Messages
2,375
Likes
1,253
With removal of headphone jack from some phones like Google Pixel 2 and iPhone, the situation will turn into how good the performance of external dongles are. I have one to test that Google sells for Pixel 2. I will measure it at some point.

How do you measure the DAC chip on the iPhone earphones...?

PS: Can you measure the digital stream coming out from the Lightning output of iPhones?
 
Top Bottom