(...) There must be some reason why SONY converted its master tapes to quad DSD. The vinyl versions are quite listenable, but the quad DSD is just real.(...)
Is it expected that Sony will release quad DSD recordings to consumers?
(...) There must be some reason why SONY converted its master tapes to quad DSD. The vinyl versions are quite listenable, but the quad DSD is just real.(...)
Rob is a very nice guy, but hates DSD. He has never heard proper DSD and Chord Dacs dont sound good on DSD. I know, as I have one and heard them all. Nobody who has beard DSD doen right can say it that it does not sound good and indeed BETTER than PCM on some genres.
Finally, upsampling to DSD256 in Linux and DSD512 in Windows is extraordinaryly good on a lot of material.
I first thought it a bit odd that the originator of the Chord Dave DAC, Rob Watts, decided to post his very erudite thoughts on a headphone blog.
Define "good" and "better" please. By which criteria? Tonality, dynamics, soundstage, presence, timbral resolution, rhythm & timing, and so on?
Also, do you experience too much softness with DSD, or you find it sound right? Or do you experience too much hardness with PCM, or do you find it sound right? Or does it depend more on the recording/mastering than the format? And how does all this compare with unamplified live music, in your view?
You see, if all these questions are not addressed, then "good" or "better" becomes mere personal taste, and meaningless in terms of an objective assessment of quality.
I won't get drawn into any long debate but I spent a whole day comparing Hugo to 3 other Dacs via HPs and thee Hugo was horrific on DSD...worse than the Qute even. Chord murders DSD with their heavy processing approach that works for PCM but not for DSD. All these formats can sound good, but DSD is harder o encode and easier to playback. PCM is the opposite. I have heard he DAVe which I like, but not specifically the DSD which I expect is at best decent. DSD requires no additives, no preservatives. Imbibe it straight!Define "good" and "better" please. By which criteria? Tonality, dynamics, soundstage, presence, timbral resolution, rhythm & timing, and so on?
Also, do you experience too much softness with DSD, or you find it sound right? Or do you experience too much hardness with PCM, or do you find it sound right? Or does it depend more on the recording/mastering than the format? And how does all this compare with unamplified live music, in your view?
You see, if all these questions are not addressed, then "good" or "better" becomes mere personal taste, and meaningless in terms of an objective assessment of quality.
If somebody brings one, I'll put it against the Aqua + SGM. Again, I love to be proven wrong, as I've never been impressed with anything made by Chord, much on the contrary actually...
cheers,
alex
Rob has simply never heard DSD done right. I challenged him about this a few years back and he didn't take me on. He is a PCM guy and hey, I am OK with that...but as such, he should not talk about great DSD.I was wondering the same thing myself. When I use headphones it is only out of necessity. When Rob goes on about the merits or otherwise of DSD soundstaging I cannot reconcile such considerations at all to headphone use! And yes, I have heard the very best of the world's headphones and the soundstaging is as flat as a pancake or non-existent regardless (take your pick). It just makes any mention of DSD soundstaging as all but irrelevant in that context to my way of thinking. But I do understand Chord products have become extremely popular with headphone users thanks to their latest portable devices.
Define "good" and "better" please. By which criteria? Tonality, dynamics, soundstage, presence, timbral resolution, rhythm & timing, and so on?
Also, do you experience too much softness with DSD, or you find it sound right? Or do you experience too much hardness with PCM, or do you find it sound right? Or does it depend more on the recording/mastering than the format? And how does all this compare with unamplified live music, in your view?
You see, if all these questions are not addressed, then "good" or "better" becomes mere personal taste, and meaningless in terms of an objective assessment of quality.
On my Dac, BOTH PCM and DSD sounds great. I have TBs of music and recently a decent PC to upsample to dsd512 too. I have DSD256, DSD512 chipless and R2R Ladder PCM in a single box. Great platform to try everything.
I recently send a great precision sample to a pal. It's RBCD, but I played back in DSD512 and it was spectacular. My Pal insisted that the music was good but the recoding quality was lacking. We were at loggerheads until I recalled that I was upsampling! Big difference.We have similar Dacs.
My point is AL, don't close your mind!!!
I am not and Yggy fan at all, but my pal Joe keeps insisting, so next visit, I will make sure to hear it in his system. Perhaps that new dynamic can change my mind.
Better? By that I mean the full auditory illusion like thinking there is the ghost of Louis in the room singing to you!
AL, I am no poet. All I can say its that its more solid/tangible/palpable. The ghost in the machine...rich/full/dripping with believability. Musical and detailed enough, certainly pulling the emotional strings.
Perhaps???I am not closing my mind. I have heard good or perhaps even great DSD. Actually, I'm pretty sure it was great(and not obviously soft).
My point was about "good", "better" and now, with this post of yours, "great". It seems to me that it simply means, coming from you -- "I like it", or "I like it better". Can't do much with such info unless I know your exact tastes and/or what areas of reproduction you are referring to.
Well, that seems pretty poetic to me![]()
Just to be fair regarding that proposed comparison, the DAVE DAC now retails for US$10,600 while the Aqua Formula DAC & SGM combo is about three times that price. Still might be interesting since they have completely different engineering approaches to digital conversion.If somebody brings one, I'll put it against the Aqua + SGM. Again, I love to be proven wrong, as I've never been impressed with anything made by Chord, much on the contrary actually...
cheers,
alex
Just to be fair regarding that proposed comparison, the DAVE DAC now retails for US$10,600 while the Aqua Formula DAC & SGM combo is about three times that price. Still might be interesting since they have completely different engineering approaches to digital conversion.
Here you go - its the thumbnail at the bottom of this post - http://www.diyaudio.com/forums/blogs/abraxalito/943-noise-modulation-subjective-performance-dacs.html
Not trying to be argumentative but that's not what he said about the DAVE: "If somebody brings one, I'll put it against the Aqua + SGM".He would use the SGM to feed to DAVE to. The SGM is just a very good transport.Aqua is $14K which is the old DAVE price.
Some people don't like the DAVE. I quite liked it when I heard it. Bass is one area of complaint for some. SS Depth is a normal positive often highlighted.
Just to be fair regarding that proposed comparison, the DAVE DAC now retails for US$10,600 while the Aqua Formula DAC & SGM combo is about three times that price. Still might be interesting since they have completely different engineering approaches to digital conversion.
Rob is a very nice guy, but hates DSD. He has never heard proper DSD and Chord Dacs dont sound very good on DSD. I know, as I have one and heard them all. Nobody who has heard DSD done right can say it that it does not sound good and indeed BETTER than PCM on some genres.
Finally, upsampling to DSD256 in Linux and DSD512 in Windows is extraordinarily good on a lot of material.
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