Gmood1,
>> You must ask yourself. Why use a preamp between your
>> Wadia and amplifier?
the answer is very simple: Wadia's digital gain control is the absolute pitts! Sonically, it stinks! I know I'm an owner but I will not prop up this unit just 'cuz I spent money on it. What I do is put the volume control to 100 thereby bypassing it. Now I have totally lost control over adjusting the volume. That is where my preamp comes in. Inside the Wadia they provide a set of DIP switches to adjust the buffer outputs from 4.25V all the way down to 0.25V for each channel separately. I believe that the user adjusts this output depending on the amount of voltage gain in his/her preamp.
Wadia claims to have a patented I-->V conversion technique & I wonder if these buffers are doing double duty of I-->V + buffering? I don't know enough about the Wadia design (& the DAC control PCB is multi-layered thereby making wire tracing nearly impossible) to make a useful comment.
>> There's a reason why APL,RAM and other modders
>> concentrate so much on the output stage of their
>> players. Which includes doing away with the negative
>> feedback opamps.
well, even if I try the BVAudio SR10 external buffer, there's no getting rid of the negative feedback opamps inside the SN DAC.
OK, I can understand negative feedback in the opamp-based output stage is less sonically than those outputs stages not having any.
>> Also the impedance does matter when driving long
>> interconnects or passives.
agree! How long is long tho? Not 1m interconnect! I think long would be in excess of 5m.
I would agree that output impedance is very imp when driving passives. A CDP having an output imp of 3K (as written in your orig post) would likely be an issue when driving a passive preamp. I agree!
>> I can imagine handling interconnect interactions is a
>> walk in the park for such players.
I believe that this would also be a true statement for a DAC using a Burr-Brown OPA627.
When I plug this SN DAC into my preamp, I have so much gain from this DAC that I have to crank down the volume knob atleast 3 clicks from where I listen to the Wadia. In the CAT that's quite a gain reduction.
>> I wish you were closer ..I could quickly prove your
>> hypothesis wrong.
well, my hypothesis is, for the SN Saru DAC+ which uses a strong enough output buffer than can drive my 1m interconnect + my preamp input capacitance, that badly recorded CDs sound terrible thru it 'cuz the dominant effect is poor jitter performance in the recovered clock from the input data stream. The poor jitter performance xlates to poor DAC performance as the DAC uses this jittery clock to perform a D-->A.
(Were I to additionally remove the negative feedback in the output buffer would I get even better sound? probably!
I think that in my DAC the jitter performance dominates over the negative feedback in the output buffer).
>> You must ask yourself. Why use a preamp between your
>> Wadia and amplifier?
the answer is very simple: Wadia's digital gain control is the absolute pitts! Sonically, it stinks! I know I'm an owner but I will not prop up this unit just 'cuz I spent money on it. What I do is put the volume control to 100 thereby bypassing it. Now I have totally lost control over adjusting the volume. That is where my preamp comes in. Inside the Wadia they provide a set of DIP switches to adjust the buffer outputs from 4.25V all the way down to 0.25V for each channel separately. I believe that the user adjusts this output depending on the amount of voltage gain in his/her preamp.
Wadia claims to have a patented I-->V conversion technique & I wonder if these buffers are doing double duty of I-->V + buffering? I don't know enough about the Wadia design (& the DAC control PCB is multi-layered thereby making wire tracing nearly impossible) to make a useful comment.
>> There's a reason why APL,RAM and other modders
>> concentrate so much on the output stage of their
>> players. Which includes doing away with the negative
>> feedback opamps.
well, even if I try the BVAudio SR10 external buffer, there's no getting rid of the negative feedback opamps inside the SN DAC.
OK, I can understand negative feedback in the opamp-based output stage is less sonically than those outputs stages not having any.
>> Also the impedance does matter when driving long
>> interconnects or passives.
agree! How long is long tho? Not 1m interconnect! I think long would be in excess of 5m.
I would agree that output impedance is very imp when driving passives. A CDP having an output imp of 3K (as written in your orig post) would likely be an issue when driving a passive preamp. I agree!
>> I can imagine handling interconnect interactions is a
>> walk in the park for such players.
I believe that this would also be a true statement for a DAC using a Burr-Brown OPA627.
When I plug this SN DAC into my preamp, I have so much gain from this DAC that I have to crank down the volume knob atleast 3 clicks from where I listen to the Wadia. In the CAT that's quite a gain reduction.
>> I wish you were closer ..I could quickly prove your
>> hypothesis wrong.
well, my hypothesis is, for the SN Saru DAC+ which uses a strong enough output buffer than can drive my 1m interconnect + my preamp input capacitance, that badly recorded CDs sound terrible thru it 'cuz the dominant effect is poor jitter performance in the recovered clock from the input data stream. The poor jitter performance xlates to poor DAC performance as the DAC uses this jittery clock to perform a D-->A.
(Were I to additionally remove the negative feedback in the output buffer would I get even better sound? probably!
I think that in my DAC the jitter performance dominates over the negative feedback in the output buffer).