Audiophile Changer: Cool or Hopeless Compromise?


Hello again everyone. It is great to be back to this site. Having owned and sold a Levinson 31 (sounded fine but didn't REALLY do it for me) I am finally going back to analogue and perhaps, a SONY SCD-1.

For general every day listening of my 2-300 CDs, however, it would be wonderfully convenient to have them in a changer. Is anyone taking a digital output from one of these things and running it through an external D/A, for example an ARC DAC-1 or DAC2 with decent results? Which changer transport is the best? CD or DVD/multi? And can someone please explain "upsampling"? In my experience, I have never really been transported by anything digital. I am waiting to be converted but in the mean time, would just love to conveniently enjoy a few hundred CDs without getting a migraine or thinking that reading a magazine or watching cable would be more satisfying. Thanks for you ideas and advice. Happy holidays to everyone.
cwlondon
To everyone reading this thread: The Aiwa 5 disc changer that Sugarbrie and I are recommending is sonically equivalent to the Wadia transport, if used with the optical out into a dac with 24 bit sigma delta D/A converters.

This Aiwa "engineering anomaly" is in a COMPLETE DIFFERENT CATEGORY as compared to ANYTHING available by other Japanese manufacturers (remember, the Aiwa sounds as good as the Wadia!). Again, I know that this sounds like an exaggeration, but this is the hard cold truth.
what model number Awia are you talking about and what DAC are you pairing with it? I've been thinking of purchasing the Cambridge Audio D500SE.

I'm still new to this, besides the source, where would an external DAC also help me out?
Hmm ... the word must be getting out. Found a number of Aiwa XC-35Ms and 37Ms for sale in the $120-130 range. Must be some mass retailer lurking around here!

Very interesting info Sugarbrie and Ehider, thanks.
I needed a changer for background music and occasional critical listening so I purchased an Aiwa XC37M. Before they were discontinued, they sold for about $90. Now, if you can find one, they are probably selling at their list price, which is probably around $120. If you get one, it needs to be modified by Stan Warren of Supermods to sound its best. In its stock form, the Aiwa is a so-so (not bad, not great) transport. It is about the equal of my aging Marantz CD94 cd player or Radio Shack CD-3400. The modification by Stan Warren, which costs around $150 elevates the performance, by removing midrange glare and grain and improving the dynamics a little. The Aiwa is a great bargain in that there is nothing near its price range that will challenge it, as far as I know. However, I also have a Parasound CBT2000 belt drive transport which is a better transport than the Aiwa. However, the Parasound listed for $1,600 when new. The Parasound has deeper bass and an overall more "relaxed" and natural sound compared to the Aiwa. My comments need to be qualified in that I have not plugged my Aiwa straight in to any 24 bit sigma converters. I also use an Audio Alchemy DTI Pro with the Aiwa as I have found the Audio Alchemy to improve the sound of any transport I have tried.
I have only tried two 24 bit converters and while they both offered more resolution than my aging 1 bit converters, neither one of them sounded more natural.
Some of the Pioneer units especially the 100 disc have a feature with ADLC (auto digital level control) which helps keep songs from different CD's at close to the same output level so you don't get extreme playback volumes when listening - they also have toslink digital outputs to hook to a DAC.