So, both techniques can have good S/N (Delta-Sigmas have improved a LOT since the 90’s), but the issue with Delta-Sigma is the filtering. The issue with R2R is this non-linearity. This is what I had said all along. Eliminate the bad digital filtering and you have something really fine with Delta-Sigma. This is what my ears tell me.
@audioengr Thank you for your response regarding my question about the filter, and pointing out that you remove or replace it in your design, and how that differs from "apodizing". It would seem Benchmark also replaces the filter, given what shadorne states about how the ESS chip filter is overridden. Okay. Fair enough.
Regarding the non-linearity, this is corroborated by Benchmark. According to Benchmark (this was forwarded to me by Rory Rall at the time I was in the market for a DAC and Benchmark was on the radar):
"The distortion in a ladder DAC is caused by resistor mismatch. This resistor mismatch causes linearity errors. The step sizes between adjacent digital codes are inconsistent. Even if the resistors are precision trimmed, they drift with temperature. This drift is not just a function of the ambient temperature. The change in resistance can even be induced by the instantaneous heating caused by the audio signal."
So it would seem (to me anyway) that the non-linearity issue you are referring to is a function of *resistor temperature*, which lends credence to why Schiit recommends leaving the unit on 24/7.
That said, I can tell you that even from a cold (off 12hrs) start, and while playing and the unit is warming, my Yggy sounds better than both of my delta-sigma, which have "digititis" by comparison.
This is what my ears tell me.