You also can't have an antialiasing-less ADC the way the AudioNote DAC gets away without a reconstruction filter.
My opinion is technical. I've not heard it, though nothing in the reviewed measurements suggests any audible sonic flaws. Not in the DAC itself anyway...What is your opinion of the AudioNote DAC...in particular the 5th Element which they recently released?
On the other hand, time and again, i do hear from the few that have heard it...it is in another league above other digital they've heard.
I concur with most of what Monty's saying about RF energy - its abuse to amps and contributes IMD which IME is audible as loss of dynamics and greyness of tonality. However the fact that it sounds so good given all the abuse just points to the rubbishiness of the other kinds of non-NOS DACs. The common-or-garden kind of S-D DAC is introducing more audible crud than amps do when subjected to RF abuse - go figure.
Have we seen a review of an AudioNote NOS DAC on something other than an AudioNote amp? Especially, oh let's say... something with a JFET input stage? ;-)
Sure. I was discussing it as an example where we have detailed third party measurements already mentioned in the thread. and I agree that theoretically it's not doing anything that should damage its audible quality. The practical Concerns (warrants a capital C) would be the same for any NOS DAC without an anti-imaging filter.Don't really need to concentrate on AudioNote DAC5 as most 16 bit NOS dac (TDA15**, AD1865) don't have a reconstruction filter.
We 'objectivists' [hate that label, but it fits] generally dismiss things for transparent, documented reasons. The world is full of facts aren't merely 'a preference'.There are plenty written about Kusunoki and his theory on NOS, which will likely be dismissed by the objective type. Also, you can pick up some very cheap NOS dac on ebay ala Opus if you really want to have a go at it.
I think I'll at least ping him about this thread for his commentary.totaldac's designer Vincent is a member of this forum so maybe you can ask him.
Here is some of Martin Colloms' thoughts on Digital and NOS for anyone interested http://www.hificritic.com/Forum/yaf...HEX-balanced-has-arrived-at-HIFICRITIC.aspx?=.
And I'm not yet convinced it does sound better, but I'm also not willing to go down that testing path right now, so I'm out.He seems to be down on digital filtering for some reason there. I'm betting that the 'piano hardness' he hears is correlated with some aspects which are changing when he puts a digital filter in the chain (like with an oversampling filter - running the DAC faster therefore more glitching) and not caused by the filtering itself. I'm with 'RK' - the main reason NOS sounds better is elsewhere from (lack of) digital filtering.
And I'm not yet convinced it does sound better, but I'm also not willing to go down that testing path right now, so I'm out.
My opinion is technical. I've not heard it, though nothing in the reviewed measurements suggests any audible sonic flaws. Not in the DAC itself anyway...
NOS DACs, more importantly DACs with no reconstruction/anti-imaging filter, are going to present a serious challenge to anything downstream. If nothing else is performing the anti-imaging lowpass either, the vast majority of the signal power will be above the audible band extending into RF. My own previous testing shows that injecting high power RF into a power amplifier can produce unexpected and unpleasant results. You'll be getting the full brunt of the amplifier's IMD, RF rectification [depending on type/topology], and effects of substantial signal power beyond the GBP. ...not to mention what it will do to tweeters not rated for the amplifier's full power output.
So, my opinion is: Theoretically it's fine; we can't hear the ultrasonics. Practically, downstream components aren't designed to deal with this much ultrasonic/RF and they'll be in danger of mild to serious misbehavior... unless, I suppose, you buy them from AudioNote too. I'm going to go out on a limb here* and call this a snake oil fad, done purely for false differentiation, and an actively bad idea.
OTOH, anyone who's listened to a NOS DAC and thinks it sounds good no longer gets to complain that '44.1kHz isn't enough'; if it wasn't, AudioNote buyers would be flinging themselves out windows to escape the pain. Obviously, they're not. In fact, the acceptance of the AudioNote is a singlehanded debunking of several earlier snake-oil claims. Could this simply be a masterful troll? If so, it is _brilliant_.
.....Snip
I played with the idea of making a little javascript dither playground tool for the website, but it would eb kind of boring. The vid did show a low vs high amplitude sinewave without dither. With dither it's unremarkable... the noise floor just stays static.
I've had a couple of NOS DACs in on loan, in my system. They sound different. Let's just say the lack of Collumns' "hardness" of piano is somebody else's "softness." They sound more "analog," I'll give you that.
Tim
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