Lumin U2 mini vs Mac laptop sound test


I compared and performed a blind test for a listening friend of the following streamer set ups.

1. Router hard wire into Lumin U2 then AES into DAC

2. Wifi into Mac air, out of Mac air via cheap USB cables from my printer and an adapter to go from USB C to whatever USB termination goes into the DAC.

Conclusion.  My friend could not hear a diff.  I "think" I hear a difference but not confident I could pass a blind test. 

Rest of system:

SPL Director DAC/Preamp

SPL S1200 power amp

Kirmuss speaker cables 

Audio Solutions Figure M

I did this for knowledge and fun.  Please let me know any thoughts but I can not see how spending a lot of money for a streamer makes any sound difference. 

John

Love this stuff

johnah5

there was a difference when I switched from laptop (operated on Server 2019 OS) to u2 mini.

I used usb cable.

Dynamics, imaging, bass, so much improvements.

Software is the main difference. I went the external streamer route then went back. Roon on any OS vs Audirvana on Linux, that’s the test you want to do. 

I will say this about direct comparisons. I find during A/B gear testing gear can sound very much the same. It’s when you listen over a period of time and I don’t mean a few hours I mean days or weeks or months. That is when you hear small sounds that just suddenly appear. The bells that just ring a little ring a little more natural.  the piano that comes to life.  Clarity and detail that you didn’t pick up on the first time around.  

I have had a lot of gear to test my comments on  

PK

It is great that you have discovered that. Situation and the outcomes for everyone is quite diverging. If the difference is not audible, you could probably consider selling the dedicated streamer and just stream with Mac. It is a wonderful thing.  I wish I could do that too and get back to the foobar2000 with EQ capability but, in my case, the dedicated streamer just sound better to my ear.

Some NICE ideas here. I have another point of failure that I have never heard discussed. That being your IP (Internet Provider) I have been in a 10 year long battle with mine (they have a monopoly here) and recently tried a 5g Internet option. IT also failed miserably. I do believe that the 5G idea a good one to pursue but it is still in its infancy and not really ready for primetime.
You can't just do an online speed test and expect an arbitrary one shot test to give you ANY real idea of thruput from your IP. It only takes a lost bit here and there to totally corrupt you listening pleasure. Just because you Speed test shows you have some outrageously high numbers doesn't mean you can consistently stream flawless audio or video. It doesn't even take an A/B test to notice a complete dropout of the internet connection.
One way to see how fault tolerant your system and IP is, is by looking in you modem for it's 'Fault report' page. That is assuming you have a modem of a quality that shows such information. I personally am using a Netgear right now and it has great fault reporting down to the second.

You should really start at the Actual 'Start' of your streaming system and in any environment , on your side of the wall socket, that is the IP.