DAC recommendations for CDs in 2-channel system


Can anyone share suggestions for a DAC to go with the following setup:

Odyssey Audio Kismet monoblocks
Odyssey Audio Tempest pre-amp
Dual 1229 turntable with Shure V3
crappy CD player (used as a transport)
Schiit Modi Uber (current DAC, OK not great)
Klipsch Cornwall I speakers

I listen primarily to CDs and some vinyl at fairly low levels. The amps and preamp were recent major upgrades, so I'm thinking about getting a DAC that will hold its own with the new components.

I don't have a budget in mind, but prefer a high value for dollar. Thanks in advance!
scoran
@audioengr - some questions, since you're covering topics I don't know much about:

- Whose filter and what method of filtering is used on the Synchro-Mesh reclocker?

- Do some DACs not play well with certain reclockers? I'm wondering about the upsampling feature and what to do if the DAC is doing the same thing.

- Why S/PDIF cable instead of Toslink from the CD player/transport to the DAC?

Finally, how much improvement am I likely to see from this approach vs. simply upgrading the DAC or using an Oppo multidisc player? The setup in my room is less than optimal - all of gear I mentioned in jammed into my 12' x 10' home office with wood floors, which I'm sure vibrate since the rack sits two feet directly in front of one of the Cornwalls.

I'm intrigued by what you're proposing, but just need to understand it a little better.
@audioengr - one more question for you: my preamp (Odyssey Audio Tempest) has only analog RCA inputs. Reading the Six Moons review of your device (congrats, btw), it appears your device has only digital inputs and outputs. Will analog output from the DAC to the preamp reduce the performance gains of the Synchro-Mesh?
Might want to take a look at Resonessence Labs DAC's, I'm using the Vertias, for CD play back and this DAC is a great little gem.  Good luck in your search.
Wow - Resonessence prices seem to push up against DACs from Pass Labs. If I were going to spend that kind of money, I'd either go Pass Labs or Mytek Brooklyn!
some questions, since you're covering topics I don't know much about:

- Whose filter and what method of filtering is used on the Synchro-Mesh reclocker?

It is not a filter.  It converts S/PDIF to I2S and then this is reclocked/upsampled to 24/96 and then converted from I2S back to S/PDIF.

- Do some DACs not play well with certain reclockers? I'm wondering about the upsampling feature and what to do if the DAC is doing the same thing.


There are no incompatibility concerns.  However there are a couple of DACs out there that will probably not benefit from the Synchro-Mesh because they already have very effective reclocking internal, including the Benchmark DAC3.


- Why S/PDIF cable instead of Toslink from the CD player/transport to the DAC?


They are both S/PDIF.  The output cable should preferably be coax rather than Toslink because Toslink adds significant jitter due to the two conversions.
Finally, how much improvement am I likely to see from this approach vs. simply upgrading the DAC or using an Oppo multidisc player? The setup in my room is less than optimal - all of gear I mentioned in jammed into my 12' x 10' home office with wood floors, which I'm sure vibrate since the rack sits two feet directly in front of one of the Cornwalls.

The room will not have that much effect on the spectral response, only the imaging and bass.

Upgrading the DAC will not make a huge difference unless you spend maybe $8-10K.  The Oppo player will have high jitter compared to the Synchro-Mesh, so even a better DAC will likely not sound that much better.  You need to start with a low-jitter signal before you listen to any new DACs anyway. The low-jitter signal will improve the sound quality of all DACs, and allow you to compare their analog and filter sections rather than just hearing the jitter from your transport.

Steve N.

Empirical Audio