I’m always surprised when people say the Schitt Yggdrasil LIM is warm sounding. I always felt the opposite. It is one of the early versions of LIM #148. My system is a very detailed system consisting of the ET LFT-8b speakers w/upgraded crossover parts, Custom all hand wired Cary Audio SLP-05 w/Mundorf MCap Supreme EVO Silver/Gold coupling caps, some custom made 125WPC Cary SLAM-100 dual-mono amps (w/Teflon VCaps) each with separate PS’s. No slouch of a system
The Yggdrasil was so thin and bright in my system that I had to do a ton of mods to it to make it sound smoother and cleaner before I could really enjoy it. Lots of digital and analog PS upgrades, upgraded the 5 (each analog board) Wima caps to Rel-Cap polystyrene cube caps, which made a huge difference (cleaner, smoother) and chassis damping, and a few other things. Took me a few months of going through it until I got to where I could live with it and now love it. Before I did the mods I listened to it for a few months and then slowly made the mods over time. Previously I just thought it sounded thin, hard and a bit grainy. Now it’s fuller, the bass is much stronger and fuller, the highs are smooth and clean and the midrange is now fuller sounding. Way more textures to vocals so they actually sound more like real voices. I thought cymbals were terrible on it previously. Very crashy, hashy, grainy sounding.
It’s not like I haven’t had other decent DAC’s either that sounded fine. The best I’ve had in the system to test out was a Cary DMS-700 which sounded pretty good.
I’m really happy with LIM now. I remember reading that it was a warm sounding DAC’s and thought, huh? I use everything in balanced mode and the preamp has standard 100K inputs. I don’t know if the difference in my listening is a matter of taste or system. As I said I do have a very fast, alive, detailed system.
Anybody else found the LIM to be too thin sounding?