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
I'm using an Ayre QB 9 DSD and I've added a Regen ISO with the the optional linear power supply. I replaced the fuse with a Synergistic Research Black and attached an Akiko Audio XLR tuning stick to the Ayre DAC. These tweaks have made my DAC sound (to me) more natural, more balanced and with a greater degree of presence. I never up-sample, as it isn't necessary nor is it preferable. 
Doing this would probably alarm many however, I've tailored these tweaks to my own hearing. I would however appreciate slightly faster bass with more melodic structure whenever I'm listen to music options other than classical music and so I'm considering the new Synergistic Research Blue fuse for the Ayre. Is anyone using the Blue fuse?
@stuartk 

I am not familiar with the La Voce, but it sounds as though it may not have had enough burn-in time. Could it be the case? Also, did you notice any significant difference between balanced and single-ended outputs?

Best,

Luiz
Capacitance. A look inside a DAC will tell you. If it has allot of electrolytics it will typically have good bass.
I've owned several DAC's to date and some were more on the "thin" side in terms of Bass and others were a bit "thicker".

I have a hunch that the power supply design and how well its isolated from the rest of the sensitive pieces play a pretty big role here.

Of all the DAC's I've tried to date the best ones have been from EMM Labs/Meitner when it comes to deep/textured and clean bass output. I hear DCS is also very good in this area but I've not had the opportunity to hear that for myself, yet.
Totaldac has the best and most focused bass I have ever heard. It is also the most analog sounding digital I have heard.