How I tamed digital glare.


For months I have been trying to eliminate digital glare in the my system, which showed up most noticably in the upper middle frequency vocal range, especially female vocals. I tamed some by replacing the stock fuse in my dac with HifiTuning Supreme Cu on the sage advice of Chris Van Haus of VH Audio, resulting in a significant improvement in tonal density, detail and clarity. So far, so good. Today I lightly dusted the laser lens in my CEC transport with a microfiber cloth and was astonished to discover a substantial improvement! And the laser lens and drive compartment appeared clean to begin with (in a smoke free environment). I tried cleaning contacts, swapping power cords and interconnects, rolling the tube in my MHDT dac, and so forth, but this simple protocol was more effective than any of those experiments. I suppose results may vary as every system is unique, but for me this simple tweak was revelatory: greater clarity and a signifcant reducton of hash. Wish I had thought of tt in the beginning; it would have saved me considerable time and frustration.
pmboyd
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kosst_amojan
... the mere fact you can run a piece of software off a CD 1000 times with a 100% success rate demonstrates the reliability of the medium.
Apples/oranges. There's a difference between reading a data CD and playing an audio CD in real time, as has been demonstrated in the research I referenced. There's no need to pretend that prior research doesn't exist.
Digital storage is not the issue.  It's turning the digital data into music.  The "A" in DAC.  Here timing is a big issue--how accurately, from a timing point of view, the converter is running.
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