what causes the sss in words like 'thisss'?


I run apple lossless codec -> airport express -> recently purchased musical fidelity x-dac & tube buffer -> rotel 1056 receiver -> Quad 22L floorstanding speakers . I have also tried a cheap cd player source but no luck.

So what causes those annoying sss sounds in words? Source? Amp? interconnect? I'm considering returning the musical fidelity stuff and spring for a naim CD5 and nait 5i combo. Thoughts?
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Monstachuck

It's the album. I am a U2 fan, but the last couple albums (not that U2 albums are "Audiophile") have been poorly recorded. Great music though!

Brian
You are more apt to hear the negative sibilance on female vocalists than anything else simply because females (and a few males) have extreme precision when pronouncing the 'ssss' sound.

And it happens to be one of the most difficult sounds to reproduce accurately.

For some reason, this is the area that is most notably improved once proper line conditioning has been installed.

And it sure beats listening to all that sh'ing noise.

In my experience, I've not noticed this negative sibilance having anything directly to do with the room acoustics or digital sources. But I suppose it's possible.

-IMO
Get your favorite crushed velvet portrait of elvis regardless. It cant hurt...that much
I think it's many reasons combined.
1) clipping at high freequencies
2) poor recording that again might result poor equipment to clip at high freequencies not neccessarily at amplifier/speaker domain but adequately at source or preamp.
There's something else to consider. Either the recordings microphones were improperly placed or the wrong style microphones were either properly or improperly placed,or both.

Does the severity of the problem vary from recording to recording? Does the severity of the problem vary with the locations of the instruments within the soundstage-indicating distance and direction from a microphone?