Buddy you’re trolling. But you finally googled it.
What components did you try the iFi gizmo on? it’s not a thousand dollar gadget. Give it a shot and if it doesn’t do anything in your system report back and return it to Amazon. Voice your concerns to the manufacturer instead of provoking others. I get it you like the smell if your farts. Just makes you seem desperate for attention.
ifi LAN iSilencer
I discovered this Ethernet signal purifier for network audio streamers, just by chance, while surfing the internet. I have an extremely highly resolving hifi system. After reading all the positive customer comments and reviews, I said to myself, what the heck, only 89 bucks, let's go for it. After receiving the ifi, as recommended, I plugged it into my audio switch, then plugged one end of the ethernet cable into it, and plugged the other end of that ethernet cable into my DAC/Streamer. Now, I already have a variety of audio tweaks throughout my system, including my speakers. But when I added the ifi, the background got even deeper, darker and blacker. It was absolutely amazing!!! This little gizmo worked exactly as advertised!!! Highly recommended.
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@mikhailark I am loathe to step into this, but having been a software engineer for thirty five years and doing plenty of kernel work along the way, the focus on packet loss as the issue, and ignoring everything else, including user experience, becomes annoying. I am a firm believer that there is little packet loss or data corruption in streaming, the protocols do their job well and it is not the primary issue. Noise, finding its way into the streamer via an ethernet cable, is one of the primary issues addressed by products like this one. We are not talking about file transfer, we are talking about audio reproduction, using digitally transferred files as a source. The more refined the audio equipment, the more likely it will be affected by noise in an audible, or even subliminal way. |
@zlone - good. Ah, but manufacturer claims improvements in transfer :-) so it is already subject to truth in advertisement. Next, here is quote from the iFi site - "The LAN iSilencer removes the electrical noise that distorts the audio signal from your network." Huh? What audio signal in my CAT6? Where? Now, if noise to streamer is an issue. First, it is a twisted pair, correct? So we are talking POOR implementation of the input analog receiver and ADC in the network hardware of the receiver. Sounds unlikely since chips and solutions are 99% standard, nothing is custom there. So next, you may say - leak EMI from network cable over to.... where? If streamer is combined with DAC - maybe... Get a shielded cable then. If streamer is an ARM PC with USB out - unlikely. Digital to digital over controlled protocols with recovery. Decent DAC is immune to USB noise and would have isolation at the input. In the worst case DDC like Denafrips Iris in front of the DAC would be a much better choice. |
Reduced line noise could be considered an improvement in transfer. Subjective and marketing fluff to be sure, but technically probably correct. "Audio signal" is used as an understandable term for non-technical buyers. Minor stuff, this is not a technical document. I get what you are saying about noise, how does it affect the stream? I don't know, but I do know that audio hardware manufacturers go to great lengths to reduce it and control it. You are railing against the marketing. For the price it is worth a try. I have not tried it myself, however I did buy the Stack Audio equivalent, as did a friend of mine. It makes a difference, I don't know exactly why. |
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