Just use the shortest cable you can, no need to waste money on a fancy USB cable.Hey there,
What is your opinion on Tripp Lite usb cable vs Supra.
I have been thinking of changing my cable from cable creation to tripp lite. It has ferrite core and without option.
Could you please help me here. Unfortunately I don't have option to buy Supra where I live. But would like to know more.
Just use the shortest cable you can, no need to waste money on a fancy USB cable.
It doesn't answer your question but I've tried a Marantz CD6000 KI that had problems with Topping D30Pro (CS8416 receiver) but worked with D90 (AK4118 receiver).This is one long thread. Have anyone using a CD Transport with the D90 or D90 MQA encountered skipping?
No issues with my Musical Fidelity A3.2CD as a transport over coax.This is one long thread. Have anyone using a CD Transport with the D90 or D90 MQA encountered skipping?
Absolutely. I had a $2200 DAC running on the USB cable included with a Brother laser printer.Just use the shortest cable you can, no need to waste money on a fancy USB cable.
I used Cambridge Audio cd transport (reads only cd. No sacd or dvd) with D90 MQA without any problems at all. Sounded really good.This is one long thread. Have anyone using a CD Transport with the D90 or D90 MQA encountered skipping?
Absolutely. I had a $2200 DAC running on the USB cable included with a Brother laser printer.
Input sample rates of 352.8 kHz and higher always use the Super Slow Roll-Off filter (called NOS by RME) on those AKM DAC chips.I have some options to send an upsampled signal to my D90 via Roon or HQ Player. Does anyone know when/if the internal oversampling filters of the D90 are bypassed when you go over a certain rate? I know that for my RME ADI-2 on my desktop input rates of 352.8k and over you bypass internal oversampling filters but I can't seem to find this out for the D90. Thanks.
Super useful to know. Would you happen to know for the ESS9038pro or ESS in general?Input sample rates of 352.8 kHz and higher always use the Super Slow Roll-Off filter (called NOS by RME) on those AKM DAC chips.
Thank you. So if I used a filter say in Roon (I have been using Precise, Linear Phase) would that work against the Super Slow Roll-Off filter in some way?Input sample rates of 352.8 kHz and higher always use the Super Slow Roll-Off filter (called NOS by RME) on those AKM DAC chips.
I don't know about ESS. Both AKM and ESS can also use external filters.Super useful to know. Would you happen to know for the ESS9038pro or ESS in general?
That looks like an excellent filter, better than the corresponding AKM Sharp Roll-off. It will work fine. Perhaps it's better to upsample to 192 kHz to avoid the Super Slow aka NOS filter, I don't know.Thank you. So if I used a filter say in Roon (I have been using Precise, Linear Phase) would that work against the Super Slow Roll-Off filter in some way?
That looks like an excellent filter, better than the corresponding AKM Sharp Roll-off. It will work fine. Perhaps it's better to upsample to 192 kHz to avoid the Super Slow aka NOS filter, I don't know.
I do not (or no longer, because of ageing induced hearing loss in the treble region). I just use the one that looks more correct to me. But then I listen mostly with loudspeakers and when I enjoy the music I could not care less about “critical listening” — once my system does not distract me from the music it is perfect to me.You people hear the differences with filters? Really?