I have the Simaudio Moon Series: 260D CD Player BurrBrown PCM1793 high-resolution 24-bit/192-kHz DAC. Formally the MOON CD-1. In what price range do I need to go for a Dac to better this player? Just curious.
DACs are intersting in that I find that very good performance can be had for not much these days most likely as a result of increased maturity associated with a large commercial market for products that use DACs. High end audio is a drop in the bucket compared to the overall market and applicability of DACs these days in computers and various digital music devices. Not to say all are good or great, but many are even by most digital audiophile standards. My $300 (used) mhdt Constantine DAC continuously amazes me how well it performs even in comparison to some of the most expensive dacs out there that I have heard. I also have an mhdt Paradisea that cost just a tad more and is also very musical.
as a probably-worthless aside, my $59-on-ebay muse audio mini hifi dac (which i've crowed about on these forums) uses the exact same dac and opamps as the op's $1500 simaudio. i know there's more to a dac's sound than just the chip, but i'd actually be curious to compare the two. i do agree with arnettpartners that the mf v-dac is a genuine giant-killer.
I have a few tracks on my music server that I recorded about 5-6 years ago during my initial recent foray into computer audio. I used an audioquest stereo mini to dual phono analog IC into my Denon CD recorder. The source was various Real Player live music streams. Then I ripped the tracks from recorded CD to music server as lossless .wav using my standard process.
This was using a very compact but decent quality Dell laptop from about 10 years ago or so.
This was not reference quality source material, but the results are quite good and very musical compared the rest of my music library given that they were produced using the most primitive approach I have applied in recent years. One would be hard pressed to question their quality overall, though dynamics are perhaps a tad compressed.
Easily in the same league or perhaps even better than the best home cassette recordings one might have made using earlier analog home technology. CLearly superior at least in terms of noise levels.
SO I guess my point is we are way better off these days in regards to affordable yet very good quality home (digital) audio than ever before. Its a great time to be both a music lover and audiophile!
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