Neutral Dac?


I’m curious to see people’s opinions on what they believe is the most uncolored dac? Every dac I’ve tried seems to be a flavor that deviates from neutrality in some way (smooths things over, too bright, too soft on transients, lacks bass etc...). Is there a dac that people believe gets all the fundamentals correct with leaving very little sonic footprint? What is the cost threshold needed to achieve it? I’m surprised at my own findings recently but really curious if anyone else has been searching for a fundamentally uncolored dac and what they’ve found.

   I realize the most obvious answer is "the dac with impeccable measurements" but I have also found some of them to sound unnatural (dry/bright).

schw06

@grannyring  Hey Bill that is awesome thank you. I know we both use the Circle Labs A200 so knowing there’s synergy is helpful and Tron is not a dac that was on my radar. Colin is a great guy and also using his tchernov usb cable which is amazing(I still have your Acoustic BBQ usb and still think very highly of it). Knowing you well and trusting your ears, your recommendation holds great weight and thank you!

Natural.   Yes.  Some DACs can sound more

like analog and less like digital.  Or bad digital anyway.   
 

If no one remembers the Sony CDP 101 is was only capable of 14 bit resolution.  The fact that it didn’t skip (usually) or have surface noise were it’s best attributes

I was playing mostly records at the time because there were only about a half a dozen rock CDs when it first came out.  They came out slowly, Classical music was getting released big time and pop / rock slowly followed 

we are definitely lucky to be able to buy great digital gear that most people can afford.   Maybe sacrifice here or there but see the value in a really good DAC.  The price / performance ratio has never been higher.