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    The Computer Audiophile

    Astell & Kern AK100 Portable High Resolution Music Player Review

    thumb-200px.pngI heard about the Astell & Kern AK100 portable music player from iriver a few months ago and was impressed by its appearance online. The player looks really nice compared to almost every other player available including many mobile phones. Shortly after perusing the Astell & Kern website I moved on to other items of the day and completely forgot about the player. Fortunately iRiver contacted me a couple weeks ago offering the Astell & Kern player for review. I happily accepted. Since its arrival I've been like a little kid who received the latest game console for the holidays. I can't stop listening to my favorite music through the Astell & Kern AK100. The sound is so much better than my iPhone 5 that I really can't go back to such an unresolving and muddy sounding device. I'm rarely this excited about a new audio component. My excitement reminds me of the times when I've purchased a new component or pair of speakers and I couldn't stop listening to all of my favorite tracks just to hear them in a new way. I'm absolutely hooked on the Astell & Kern AK100 and I couldn't be more thrilled.[PRBREAK][/PRBREAK]

     

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    What Is The Astell & Kern AK100

     

    3-250px.pngThe Astell & Kern AK100 is a portable music player made by iriver. This player is so much more than its name implies and most importantly it sounds so much better than typical portable music players. The AK100 is made of nicely brushed aluminum that feels really good in the hand. The unit has a substantial feel to it although its 2.33" x 3.11" x 0.57" frame isn't heavy. When I unboxed the AK100 I was surprised by the unit's small palm sized housing. All the photos online make it look a bit larger than real life. Speaking of unboxing, the Astell & Kern is packaged like a true high end audio product. Opening the unit is like opening a finely wrapped present. Apple is no longer the sole portable audio manufacturer who has mastered the art of packaging. The AK100 features a 2.4" IPS touchscreen for all but the most basic navigation and playback control. The screen is nice but nothing to write home about. It enables the user to control the unit and get on with listening to music.

     

    Internally the Astell & Kern AK100 contains a Wolfson WM8740 24bit, 192kHz DAC. The DAC supports all relevant PCM sample rates including 44.1, 48, 88.2, 176.4, and 192 kHz at both 16 and 24 bits. File formats supported include audiophile favorites AIFF, WAV, FLAC, and ALAC. The AK100 features built-in 32GB NAND memory that can be supplemented by two 32GB micro SD cards for a total storage capacity of 96GB. Considering the stellar sound quality of the AK100 I'm willing to give up my 160GB iPod Classic for the 96GB of sonic bliss. I realize this review is beginning to read like a commercial for the Astell & Kern but I have to be honest about how impressed I am with this little device.

     

    The Astell & Kern is much more about sound quality and using the product than it is specs and features. Sure the ability to input or output optical digital audio and its signal-to-noise ratio, crosstalk, etc… are nice, but this device is about moving great sounding music from one's listening room to any location in the house or on the planet. I can't remember the last time I sat in my living room listening to such quality sound reproduction while looking out the front window. I'm usually stuck downstairs in my listening room with small rays of sunlight seeping through the bushes and small windows. It is really enjoyable to have great tunes and great sound anywhere.

     

    As a music aficionado who can't get enough I listen to music through headphones every night while falling asleep. This is usually done with an iPhone 5 and Ultimate Ears ue11 Pro in ear monitors. The combination is less than perfect but the small iPhone and IEM earphones are hard to beat for convenience and staying on good terms with my wife. I also use this combination while traveling quite a bit. Thus the reason why I compared the Astell & Kern to the iPhone 5. Both are portable music players that can be outperformed by a number of large desktop headphone amps, but that's not the point. Portable high end sound is what the AK100 is all about. In my small headphone collection is a Ray Samuels SR-71A that I used to connect to my iPhone 4's analog output. Based on memory I believe the AK100 outperform the iPhone 4 / SR-71A combination in sound quality and easily inconvenience. The two piece iPhone 4 / SR-71A package was always a hassle. In fact I stopped bringing it with em on the road because I hated the two piece cluster with an extra cable.

     

    Back to listening a night with the ue11 Pro and the Astell & Kern. One unexpected advantage of the AK100 is its inability to conduct business such as emails, phone calls, and text messages. I never realized how nice this would be until I laid down with the unit and pressed play. I was in my own uninterruptible world safe from the next flame war taking place in the CA forum or the next meaningless text message from a friend spending too much time at the local Regal Beagle. Most of my listening through the Astell & Kern was done with CD quality 16/44.1 music. This allowed me to compare apples to apples as my iPhone 5 only accepts 16/44.1. From the very first track it was no contest. Keb' Mo's Every Morning was crystal clear with excellent separation between each guitar string. The same track played through the iPhone 5 and ue11 Pro combo was very muddy with the guitar often sounding like a one-stringed instrument. Listening to Miles Davis' Kind of Blue through the AK100 was much closer to the sound of my main system than it was to the iPhone 5 or even the iPhone 4 / SR-71A combo. Switching to high resolution material was equally as enjoyable. Passacaglia from the Kansas City Symphony is a go-to track I both like and use as a test of audio components. Recorded by Keith Johnson at Reference Recordings this track has serious dynamic range and displays both delicacy and power of an audio system. The Astell & Kern reproduced this track very well. I don't think I've ever heard it this good on a portable system. Ottmar Liebert's One Guitar at 24/96 sounded excellent as well. Many of the attributes heard in the Keb' Mo' track were present with this complete album. Each pluck of the guitar string was clear as day and the overall sound put the iPhone 5 to shame. Switching back and forth between the AK100 and the iPhone 5 during this review I frequently lost interest in all the music played through the iPhone. Once one hears something better it's impossible to go back to subpar performance. Sure the music was good but both the music and the sound was good through the Astell & Kern.

     

     

    Conclusion

     

    cash-logo-black-thumb.jpgThe Astell & Kern AK100 is the best portable music player I've yet heard. The fact that it handles high resolution audio up through 24 bit / 192 kHz is just a bonus. Both my high resolution and CD quality 16 bit / 44.1 kHz music sounded superb through the AK100 and Ultimate Ears ue11 Pro earphones. The build quality of the AK100 is terrific with the exception of the volume knob that's a little cheap feeling to the touch. The all aluminum housing is a delight to handle. The AK100's expandable storage from 32GB (built-in) to 96GB (via Micro SD card) is a great plus considering how much music one will want to hear through this high end component. I'd love to make the Ak100 the heart of my portable audio solution. I highly recommend the Astell & Kern Ak100 for all computer audiophiles and music aficionados. It's simply that good.

     

     

     

     

     

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    ^ I note it's got bluetooth as well for the car.. this looks like one pretty versatile little player Chris.. :)

     

    We really should get one for Neil Young to play in his Chevy Volt! : )

     

    Esau

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    Vinnie at Red Wine does an iMod-type mod for it and sells it for $895 (or just mod for $250). This is from Vinnie's site...FYI:

     

    "We bypass the 22-ohm resistors in the output stage, and hard-wire (via Cardas copper litz solid core wire) from the output stage FETs directly to the pins of the headphone output jack. Besides bypassing the 22 output resistors, this also provides the shortest, cleanest path from the output stage to the headphone jack - also bypassing the tiny circuit board traces, and the header that connects the main board to the smaller headphone jack board. It's essentially a direct connection from output stage to the headphone jack. Output impedance is now under 1 ohm..."

     

    Not trying to be an ad for Vinnie but just a response to some who wonder about its use with other headphones.

     

    That mod sounds great. I use FitEar, Jerry Harvey, and a few other very low Ω earphones. With an output of anything over 2Ω, an external lowΩ output amp is almost necessary to retain the original sound. As I mentioned, I've only heard the AK100 for a few minutes, and not with music I'm familiar with, but every time I've heard a player with a high Ω output, I've been unimpressed with sound quality for lowΩ earphones. Some people are not bothered by the differences, however.

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    I just got an email about this from ALO audio 2 minutes ago. I would love to hear a shoot out between these two products.

     

    -----------------------------------

     

    With a focus on continually improving our offerings we are proud to introduce an all new portable amplifier: The International. A fully balanced portable amplifier with balanced input and output, single-ended input and output with the addition of an internal high resolution 24 Bit / 96 kHz USB digital to analog converter.

     

    Utilizing the top of the line Cirrus Logic CS4398 DAC chip, The International sounds exactly what'd you'd expect from ALO audio. Full, rich and detailed; the chip found in many high-end SACD and CD players in now in a compact and portable amplifier.

     

    All of these features are nicely fitted in a compact (71.5 mm x 85 mm x 25.5 mm) laser etched and individually serialized enclosure.

     

    This is a headphone amp that has enough power to drive the most challenging headphones as well as enough sensitivity to pair nicely with your favorite custom IEM.

    Just $599.

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    I just got an email about this from ALO audio 2 minutes ago. I would love to hear a shoot out between these two products.

     

    -----------------------------------

     

    With a focus on continually improving our offerings we are proud to introduce an all new portable amplifier: The International. A fully balanced portable amplifier with balanced input and output, single-ended input and output with the addition of an internal high resolution 24 Bit / 96 kHz USB digital to analog converter.

     

    Utilizing the top of the line Cirrus Logic CS4398 DAC chip, The International sounds exactly what'd you'd expect from ALO audio. Full, rich and detailed; the chip found in many high-end SACD and CD players in now in a compact and portable amplifier.

     

    All of these features are nicely fitted in a compact (71.5 mm x 85 mm x 25.5 mm) laser etched and individually serialized enclosure.

     

    This is a headphone amp that has enough power to drive the most challenging headphones as well as enough sensitivity to pair nicely with your favorite custom IEM.

    Just $599.

    Hi MarkS - The products are a bit like apples and oranges though. I can see connecting the AK100 as the source to the International as the amp though.

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    To all those moaning about the maximum storage...

     

    IIRC a 24/192 "album" (CD sized) is between 2 and 2.5GB as a FLAC - even limited to 96GB thats around 40 albums IF all are 24/192. Given that most people will have a combination of 24/192 and other lower resolution I'm sure you could easily fit 70-100 albums onto the AK100. Oh and you can always have a dozen SD cards in your pocket to swap out (I assume the SD cards are externally accessible?)

     

    160GB on an iPod always seemed over the top to me.

     

    Eloise

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    Hello Chris...

     

    How to you position A&K AK100 vs DragonFly?

     

    I know - different products - but soundwise are they in the same class?

    And how do they compare?

     

    Because for me, both products would fit the bill for use on the go,

    ... with the added bonus for A&K that it can form the basis of a mini system (someone just called it the mini CAPS, a cool ideia), with both analogical and digital outputs to choose from.

     

    vs Dragonfly added bonus of extreme portability if one alread has to carry a laptop.

     

     

    Thanks!

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    Hello Chris...

     

    How to you position A&K AK100 vs DragonFly?

     

    I know - different products - but soundwise are they in the same class?

    And how do they compare?

     

    Because for me, both products would fit the bill for use on the go,

    ... with the added bonus for A&K that it can form the basis of a mini system (someone just called it the mini CAPS, a cool ideia), with both analogical and digital outputs to choose from.

     

    vs Dragonfly added bonus of extreme portability if one alread has to carry a laptop.

     

     

    Thanks!

    Hi MJ - There isn't a simple answer to your question for two reasons. 1. The products are so different, and 2. it depends on the headphones used.

     

    When traveling I use my Ultimate Ears IEMs. My Sennheiser HD600s are way to inconvenient for traveling. The DF wasn't the best match with my IEMs. The AK100 was terrific with my IEMs. Thus I prefer the sound quality of the AK100 for travel with my IEMs.

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    Hello Chris...

     

    How to you position A&K AK100 vs DragonFly?

     

    I know - different products - but soundwise are they in the same class?

    And how do they compare?

     

    Because for me, both products would fit the bill for use on the go,

    ... with the added bonus for A&K that it can form the basis of a mini system (someone just called it the mini CAPS, a cool ideia), with both analogical and digital outputs to choose from.

     

    vs Dragonfly added bonus of extreme portability if one alread has to carry a laptop.

     

     

    Thanks!

     

    I thought the Dragonfly can't play 192/24. So all most of my hirez (the vast majority are 192/24 with some 176/24) files would be down sampled by the Dragonfly. Also I never have tried to balance my laptop on the elliptical trainer at the gym and listen to music. Does anyone use a laptop for music while exercising? Thanks, Larry

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    I thought the Dragonfly can't play 192/24. So all most of my hirez (the vast majority are 192/24 with some 176/24) files would be down sampled by the Dragonfly. Also I never have tried to balance my laptop on the elliptical trainer at the gym and listen to music. Does anyone use a laptop for music while exercising? Thanks, Larry

    Hi Larry - Hope all is well and your A to D project is sailing smoothly.

     

    I love the humor :~)

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    I thought the Dragonfly can't play 192/24. So all most of my hirez (the vast majority are 192/24 with some 176/24) files would be down sampled by the Dragonfly. Also I never have tried to balance my laptop on the elliptical trainer at the gym and listen to music. Does anyone use a laptop for music while exercising? Thanks, Larry

     

    Larry is funny, yes...

    Larry, unfortunately I spend to much time at the laptop... In that specific situation, be at home or at offices, both would fit the bill - with very different storage and control options, agree.

    But would be good to know broadly where they stand.

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    Q. for those who copy their itunes tracks over in OSX..

     

    Given the current memory constraints, so owners have to be selective of what music files to put on the A&K..

     

    Can you just drag and drop whole playlists over straight from itunes into one of the folders of the A&K? Is that what you do? Or do you have to manually navigate into the itunes music library to copy the files over?

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    Q. for those who copy their itunes tracks over in OSX..

     

    Given the current memory constraints, so owners have to be selective of what music files to put on the A&K..

     

    Can you just drag and drop whole playlists over straight from itunes into one of the folders of the A&K? Is that what you do? Or do you have to manually navigate into the itunes music library to copy the files over?

     

    ITunes can be switched off, and can be totally bypassed it's a database only. The A&K appears as a mounted drive, like any USB stick, and you drag and drop compatible files (that the A&K accepts) onto the player's memory stick or native inbuilt memory.

     

    The default application for file management is OSX Finder, garbage that it is, but it works. I imagine that synchronisation between libraries and players need to be outlawed, since most libraries are now measured in TB and portable players are still in the GB range.

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    Yes, I bought it today, the hardware is nice, but the software is so poor and not user friendly.

     

    Now, I understand that why iPods do not have SD slot, iTunes is much much better ...

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    ITunes can be switched off, and can be totally bypassed it's a database only. The A&K appears as a mounted drive, like any USB stick, and you drag and drop compatible files (that the A&K accepts) onto the player's memory stick or native inbuilt memory.

     

    The default application for file management is OSX Finder, garbage that it is, but it works. I imagine that synchronisation between libraries and players need to be outlawed, since most libraries are now measured in TB and portable players are still in the GB range.

     

    Well I just tested again that you can drag and drop tracks straight from itunes onto a usb stick.. I always thought you could do this.... (but you got me worried, so I went and tried it again) So why wouldn't you do the same loading up the A&K? I mean use itunes to sort what you want then shift select, right click and drag and drop..Why would you want to do it any other way?

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    Q. for those who copy their itunes tracks over in OSX..

     

    Given the current memory constraints, so owners have to be selective of what music files to put on the A&K..

     

    Can you just drag and drop whole playlists over straight from itunes into one of the folders of the A&K? Is that what you do? Or do you have to manually navigate into the itunes music library to copy the files over?

     

    So can you copy playlists too? What kind of features does the AK100 offer for shuffling playback? For me portable listening is all about discovering new music I make random shuffled playlists of new stuff and I can rate the music with the iPod and then keep track of the things I liked when I hook it back up to iTunes. I'm guessing this might not work with this player. But I would be interested to know if it that easy to get a playlist from iTunes transferred into the AK100

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    I actually prefer for the portable device to allow management of music files just like any other files. I've never used random play or playlists. My poor man's player, the Sandisk Sansa Clip +, acts just like a USB stick or other standard storage for purposes of loading it up. FLAC player on my wife's older iPod (v3, I think) must be attached to an iTunes running computer to transfer music as far as I can tell. So I think A&K got this right. But $700? Hope it sounds really good. I'll be trying my Samsung Galaxy Note 2 with the Dragonfly or with ODAC and O2 amp instead.

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    I always do respect Chris's review, and a follower too.

     

    I purchased the AK100, yesterday, and have played around with it, below is my comment:

     

    1. It does sound great and around 10-15% better than my iPhone 4S,

     

    2. But if it compares with my MacBook Pro with Audirava plus (tested with IE800), with no doubt, the Macbook Pro outperformed AK100 with more than 20%

     

    3. However, the UI of AK100, is quite bad as compared with iPhone, the river 4 is poor design and not user friendly. In term of transferring the music files, the speed is so slow, a 4.5 GB files took around 2 hours to complete (connected the AK100 directly with MacBook Pro, it may be faster if the transfer is done via micro SD adapter and connecting directly with MBP).

     

    4. I have not idea why all the AIFF tagged files when transferred into AK100, the artist name, album, album cover are all not appeared.

     

    My conclusion, yes, it does sound better and it can play HD music files, but whether it is worth to pay US$800 for just a 10-15% improvement vs iPhone 4S, my answer is clear, "NO", bear in mind I really do not like the UI and the software, unless it can be sync with an iTunes.

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    Does anyone know if AK100 recognises FLAC with cue sheets?

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    3. However, the UI of AK100, is quite bad as compared with iPhone, the river 4 is poor design and not user friendly. In term of transferring the music files, the speed is so slow, a 4.5 GB files took around 2 hours to complete (connected the AK100 directly with MacBook Pro, it may be faster if the transfer is done via micro SD adapter and connecting directly with MBP).

     

    I wonder whether this is an indication of AK100 using USB1?

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    The third day to play with AK100, really annoyed with following :

    1. Some of the AIFF 24/192 files can't be read probably (treated as 16/192 instead of 24/192 e.g. The Eagles Hotel California and Jackson Browne Running of the Empty), once it got a problem, the machine stuck and needs to reboot.

     

    2. Again, reading the AIFF files is not stable, and sometime it refused to play and showed an Error message "The format can't be read", needs to reboot the machine to fix up

     

    3. When connecting with Bluetooth headphones, sometime it skips while playing HD music e.g. 24/96, unless keep the both device near as close as one foot distance

     

    In general, despite the above issue, its sound quality is excellent.

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    I wonder whether this is an indication of AK100 using USB1?

     

    I am not sure, anyway, I have to transfer the files via an adapter (card reader) instead of directly connecting the AK100 with my MacBook Pro .

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    I am not sure, anyway, I have to transfer the files via an adapter (card reader) instead of directly connecting the AK100 with my MacBook Pro .

     

    Everyone says you can mount the device and each SD storage comes up as a folder. Are you saying this doesn't work properly?..ie there is a bug or something?

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    The third day to play with AK100, really annoyed with following :

    1. Some of the AIFF 24/192 files can't be read probably (treated as 16/192 instead of 24/192 e.g. The Eagles Hotel California and Jackson Browne Running of the Empty), once it got a problem, the machine stuck and needs to reboot.

     

    2. Again, reading the AIFF files is not stable, and sometime it refused to play and showed an Error message "The format can't be read", needs to reboot the machine to fix up

     

    3. When connecting with Bluetooth headphones, sometime it skips while playing HD music e.g. 24/96, unless keep the both device near as close as one foot distance

     

    In general, despite the above issue, its sound quality is excellent.

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    Hi Mitch - Do have a way to verify those albums are in fact 24 bit rather than 16 bit? I have a distant memory of those being 16 bit. One way to tell is use a DAC with real bit meter rather than just reading what the file says.

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    Hi Mitch - Do have a way to verify those albums are in fact 24 bit rather than 16 bit? I have a distant memory of those being 16 bit. One way to tell is use a DAC with real bit meter rather than just reading what the file says.

     

     

    Hi Chris, They are 24 bits, but probably I made a mistake while I converting them to AIFF with MAX ( might be i chose 16 instead of 24). I do apologize on this ...

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