Are "vintage" DAC's worthwhile, or is this a tech that does not age well


Hello,
whether it’s worth looking into old dac such as
Spectral SDR 2000,
Mark Levinson No.35 (36)
or so Sonic Frontiers Sfd-2 Mk2 DAC.

Digital audio is the fasted moving, now improving category out there
Because to this day they have no usb connection or other options.
But is it necessary?
Or is it better to still focus on a truly time-tested sound?

(sorry for my English)
128x128miglos
FWIW I tried a few of the top DACs recommended by Audio Science Review from Topping and others.  Thought they were clean and measured well, to my ears, they were completely uninteresting and added nothing. To many that’s exactly what they want and I can’t fault that. However, I ended up with a MHDT Orchid using a “vintage” NOS DAC chip. It captured more of the “analog” and “vinyl-like” smoothness and life that vinyl has and added something to the music which I enjoy and which the Topping DACs did not possess. An engineer or a measurements fanatic might cry heresy but hey, it’s all about what sounds good to you. 
Agreeing with above. There’s only so much you can do with A/D conversion of 0’s and 1’s, as proven from being in studio sessions hands-on. 
Different DAC chips and different implementations leads to different sounding DAC, sometimes it's subtle, sometimes not. I experienced enough that I cannot take seriously anyone claiming the opposite. For example the W4S DAC-2 and ifi Pro iDSD sound very different, and the difference is easy to notice within seconds. One is neutral-cold while the other leans more on the warm side.
Perhaps some people start to have enough of cold and analytical modern DAC and think that vintage is the only way to go. But some modern DAC do sound musical and engaging and are not that expensive.
The job of a DAC is convert the digital signal to an analog signal without loss of information and adding audible distortion and noise. There are DACs from fairly inexpensive to outrageously expensive that can accomplish this and have been able to for quite a while now. It is possible to hear differences in DACs but it isn't easy unless the DAC has been purposely built to distort the signal or the DAC is simply junk. The reason it isn't easy to tell DACs apart is they generally measure better than your other components. Amplifiers, pre amplifiers almost always will have more distortion than a DAC, even ones that measure well. Speakers are the weakest link they swamp everything else. Add your room acoustics to the speakers and it's very unlikely anyone hears differences in competently engineered DACs. If they tell you they can ask if they listened with their ears only or their eyes and ears in other words did they pick a DAC better than chance without knowing which one they were listening to. 
If you can't distinguish the sound between a $100 dac and a $1,000 dac you better get your ears checked and get the wax taken out, and you're an idiot for saying that, obviously your system isn't good enough to be able to hear the difference. LOL