Diagnosing Distortion in PC Based System


I am experimenting with a new desktop system:

* iTunes, Apple Lossless, and WAV ripped through iTunes
* WAV files ripped from EAC and Foobar
* Sony Vaio laptop with Windows XP
* Cheapo USB interface by Creative Labs
* Optical output to Behringer Ultracurve Pro 2496
* Also, RCA output to Musical Fidelity tube buffer
* Balanced output to 2 Behringer amps, bridged as monoblocks
* ATC SCM 7 monitors in "nearfield" configuration

At first, I was really thrilled with this little system and stayed up late into the night listening and having fun with both music and movies.

After a weeks break, however, I tried it out last night with less success.

Although the mid bass and midrange are still warm and surprisingly full, and the treble on the ATCs is mostly smooth and non fatiguing, I noticed a very audible, very brittle distortion somewhere in the treble.

This distortion was was particuarly noticeable on piano attack. As the ATCs are supposed to be unusually adept at piano, this was disappointing and quickly become very irritating.

At $199 each, I shouldn't expect miracles from the amps, but they are claimed to have low distortion and with 500 watts each while operating as monoblocks, I can't imagine I am hearing clipping?

The EQ, although also bargain priced, has been praised and claimed as quiet by other users on Audiogon.

Is is possible this could relate to the Apple WAV rips vs the EAC WAV rips?

And God forbid my Chinese amps damaged my tweeters as someone suggested in another thread? (Have not been cranking heavy metal on them or anything.)

How would you diagnose and isolate this distortion, without schlepping my Levinson amp on top of my desk and rewiring everything?

Thanks for any thoughts.
cwlondon
Don't have any idea if you're having the same problem I once had with iTunes but it sounds similar.

Here's a link to my original thread describing the problem and the fix recommended by Jayboard, deleting a corrupted iTunes equalization file. The problem hasn't returned and I was assuming it was because of upgrades to the iTunes software but it's worth a shot since the recommended fix is cheap and painless.
Sfar

Thank you - the evil of iTunes is revealing itself to me...

I have just listened to a few tracks ripped in EAC and played back through Foobar and they sound great.

I thought I was fishing for answers with iTunes vs Foobar, but never would have really believed that iTunes or Apple lossless or in particular WAV files ripped through iTunes might be the culprit here.

Which of course makes all the debate on MP3 vs WAV vs Apple Lossless seem even more ridiculous.

Do you think a lot of Apple employees invent usernames for Audiogon?

I am going to stop using iTunes completely, and will also report back on other developments.
I'd check the speaker with the same source music (CD) on another system and then work your way backwards to the source of the problem by adding components (eventually replacing the CD player source with your PC if all the other components check out).
I found distortion came through at times on my Sony VAIO using XP when the enhancements were activated and EQ selected. It didn't happen all the time but it was noticeable when it did.