Are "vintage" DAC's worthwhile, or is this a tech that does not age well


Hello,
whether it’s worth looking into old dac such as
Spectral SDR 2000,
Mark Levinson No.35 (36)
or so Sonic Frontiers Sfd-2 Mk2 DAC.

Digital audio is the fasted moving, now improving category out there
Because to this day they have no usb connection or other options.
But is it necessary?
Or is it better to still focus on a truly time-tested sound?

(sorry for my English)
128x128miglos
What a long thread in 2021. 
I agree with 80% of the comments and I really like the comments about the environment, room acoustics and type of music you listen. 
I currently listen to the current production Mytek, Berkeley, Hegel and also a vintage CAL master series mid 90s tube dac. 
First I would like to share that is so much fun and a privilege to have the opportunity to listen to music in different electronics. 
All my 4 dacs sound amazing with their different sound signatures. Once my ears get used to one, I start enjoying without thinking how the others sound and back and forth and on and on. 
The 3 newer dac’s seam to have more resolution, some more separation of the frequencies and the older on is more upfront and punchy and warmer, probably do to the tube it uses. But the kind of music does matter, and to me playing with different dac’s is like playing with different styluses on a turntable. 
Now regarding the initial question of the old dacs being worth it or not. A famous tech said to me one time that to make a proper dac the analog board needs to physically be large and also transformers size and type matter. So he believes that none of the newer dac’s that are put in small boxes are good enough and vintage ones that are build with the proper principals are better. But I got to hear to believe, so Im on the hunt for a vintage dac with the biggest analog board in the world :) 

Oh, another interesting one is that currently Border Patrol makes a tube dac and the designer choose to use one of the old Philips chip. People love this little and I still yet have to hear it in my system. 
All I can say is that all is relative and everything matters in a system but most important ti me is to get transported from listening to the equipment to start floating in the music. And all electronics that makes this magic happen to me are somehow divine. 
I thing that older dac’s are deffinetly worth looking in to as long as they are up to spec and none of their parts have gone bad with age and in that case bring it ti the right tech that will give it a second life. 
Do they say, that age is just a number ;). 
@jasonbourne52:

" All competently-designed DACs will sound alike. This applies to ones from 20+ years ago to the present"

Huh ? When I was shopping for DACs, I did home-demos of DACs from PS Audio, Heed, Metrum, COS and Aqua and was shocked by the dramatic differences in resolution and tonality. These differences appeared to have little to do with price (Units ranged in price from 1K to 6K).

I'm scratching my head as to how you could possibly arrive at such a conclusion. Or is it your contention that one must spend over 6K to get a "Competently designed" DAC?  
yes -- this is a pretty good thread, with some good knowledge and perspectives that may useful to many - especially for those who don’t need more modern usb based connectivity

of course like with most well populated a-gon threads, you have to filter out a minority of the posts that are patently ridiculous, trolling, and/or just plain ignorant
"Acoustic is the sleeping princess in Audio, but all people are looking for one of the working 7 dwarves...."

Very well said, mahgister!

Midareff1 said:

”Where I think you will find significant differences are not necessarily confined to tonality, the differences are quite apparent in the sound-stage presentation. Width and depth of the stage ... the definition of performers outline and their location in the performance, not only side to side but front to back and their isolation from each other within the performance, as well as the layering of depth of stage. These are the areas I have noticed huge improvements in with one of today’s top DACs while still using the same amps, speakers and pre-amp as I did 25 years ago.”

To that I say:

I still use my Theta Pro Basic II fed by a Rega Planet through a Genesis Time Lens I put together in the early 90’s. For USB, I use a Gustard D-D converter via AESBU to the Genesis from my Mac-Mini. Where the Theta stood out and got my purchase was stage depth, width, performer location, separation and ambience. After listening to it and several others, I was sold.

Any DAC that accomplishes these things is a very good DAC indeed irrespective of age. I would also add, when I bought the Genesis, it took the Theta to an entirely higher level. Retrieval is the only word I can think to describe it. Going through my tubed system to the Maggies, the synergy is magical. I can put a performer right in the room which is what distinguishes the Theta.

I have listened to many modern DACs in my system in the intervening years that equal the Theta in tonality but precious few that rival its air. For me, getting that right is the holy grail. When accomplished, the DAC simply disappears. Some can hear this, others can’t, I suppose. In my experience, those who say DACs sound the same cannot it seems. I stay out of that.

For the newer DACs that did get it right, I could not justify the price to upgrade. The differences were just too inconsequential. The Theta holds its own and sounds pretty darned good for the price I paid and the years I have enjoyed it.

Getting a good vintage DAC is not a bad value proposition in my book.

Thanks, Midareff1, for the summation.