Schiit Bifrost vs. the original Peachtree Dac-it


Would purchasing a new Schiit Bifrost be a step up from the Peachtree Dac-it or would it be more of a lateral move?
128x128coachpoconnor
I have the Modi Multibit.  It has a unique sound.  Certainly not the last word on punchy bass or airy highs, but it holds its own and presents nice sense of space and clarity in the midrange.  It moves around at my house, from desktop system to headphone stack to main rig.  If you don't like it, send it back and you're out $50.  You'll probably end up keeping it.
thanks.. I was actually thinking about that this evening. If I didn’t like it, I believe Schiit allows you to upgrade without penalty.
@coachpoconnor 
 
Even Schiit’s flagship DAC won’t be as accurate as the two I mentioned above that are much cheaper. Like I said, only their Modi 3 is worth buying. 
You can also sell a late model Schiit on eBay. There aren't many on there and people buy them at almost 'new' prices.

@mzkmxcv-can you tell us why Schiit's flagship isn't as good as the ones you mentioned and what your experience is with the Yggdrasil?
@n80

I’m a person who wants accurate playback, I only want to hear the song as intended, so I also am very much so pro solid state over tubes, no matter how cool tubes look. The Yggy offers nothing in terms of performance for accurate playback over much cheaper DAC’s, it’s basically 16Bit (no longer linear past that, at 20Bit it’s a level is off by 60dB), when even $100 DACs can be linear to at least 18Bit usually (the $100 Khadas DAC board a linear within +/-0.2dB at 20Bit), the Yggy also has around 40dB worse THD+N than a Topping DX7 in the bass, which is almost 1/5 the price plus it has a headphone amp.

Like I said, it won’t sound bad, it just doesn’t perform as accurately as even DACs 1/10 the price. And yes, if you look at the Stereophile measurements for almost all high end DACs, they all aim for accuracy.