DACs and bass response?


I'm auditioning dacs in my system. One (COS) was way to analytical, overall, but had very tight bass. Another (Aqua La Voce) is what some would describe as "musical"  and sounds  terrific in all aspects except bass. My cdp alone does better in that regard. I have monitors and no subs. Can I expect that dacs that are hyper-detailed will also offer tighter bass as a rule?
stuartk
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In general I found that there is a trade of between mid/high to low dynamics  and not only in Dacs, gear that sounds very detailed and 'sweet' (strong at mid and high) doesn't peoduce strong punchy  bass and in contrary gear that has accurate  and tight bass tends to be less detailed and musical at the mid/high section. 
In general I prefer to sacrifice a little bit at high/ mid to achieve strong and tight bass .
Replacing capacitors mounted on a board are a bit tricky and best left to someone with experience. Point to point circuits are fairly straightforward. Don't ask me how I know.

Shadorne - I think the problem lies in where jitter is measured.  Most manufacturers measure it at the oscillator or even use the spec sheet oscillator number.

What I'm talking about is measuring the jitter of S/PDIF signal as it arrives at the DAC.  I have never seen direct measurements of this, except what I published.  Companies that make Transports, converters, reclockers and servers all need to measure this directly, but they don't.  They don't need to clip probes onto chips to do this.  They need a 75 ohm termination inside the scope or AP equipment.

Measuring jitter inside the DAC, say on a I2S bus from a USB or Ethernet converter makes a lot of sense, but it requires measuring both the bit clock and the Master Clock.  The D/A can use both of these or either one to affect jitter.  I doubt if this is done in this J-test.

Steve N.

Empirical Audio