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    The Computer Audiophile

    Weiss Engineering DAC202 Review

    DAC202-front-thumb.jpgOver the last couple years I’ve listened to people utter the phrase, “I’m waiting to see how it all shakes out." Without context it’s entirely appropriate to assume we were discussing the global economic meltdown. However these conversations revolved around music servers, interfaces, and differing computer audio technologies. People were frequently delaying the purchase of a new DAC because of their uncertainty about the future of the marketplace. Specifically uncertainty about interfaces such as USB, FireWire, Ethernet, AES/EBU, and S/PDIF. These interface options have caused serious hesitation from the same people who eagerly accepted Compact Disc technology as if it offered perfect sound forever. Equally hesitant are audiophiles feeling a bit burned by SACD and DVD-Audio. Audiophiles shouldn’t let the past halt their potential heightened enjoyment of this wonderful hobby. There’s no format war going on. Many different interfaces and technologies will flourish in the years to come. Falling victim to <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Analysis_paralysis">analysis paralysis</a> or suffering from <a href="http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=Alligator%20arms">alligator arms</a> are two easily curable conditions. Ambivalent audiophiles, It’s time to <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Fish_or_cut_bait&redirect=no">fish or cut bait</a>.

    [PRBREAK][/PRBREAK]

     

     

     

    <b>What’s The Hold Up?</b>

     

    There’s little doubt that computer based audio is the future of high end playback. In a nod to <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kn6uqwSjDjY">Rusty and Audrey Griswold</a>, the only remaining question is “Are we there yet?" The answer to that question is yes, as long as the right combination of software and hardware are selected. The perpetual naysayers who won’t be satisfied until a music server is easier to operate than a toaster should also look at a traditional dCS system with three or four separate boxes and say the spinning disk isn’t there yet because they can’t operate the dCS system with these ease of a cassette player. I’ve never heard anyone suggest the latter and I don’t see why the argument should hold true when it comes to music servers. Music servers, like most technology, can be placed on a continuum from simple to complex. Logical factors in the “Are we there yet" analysis should be related to sound quality, sample rate support, feature sets, interface design, and bit transparency.

     

    What does all this have to do with the Weiss Engineering DAC202? The DAC202 could easily be the component to knock audiophiles off the fence and on to the next phase of high end audio. The DAC202 may be the best antidote for the aforementioned audiophiles suffering from alligator arms and analysis paralysis. The sound quality, sample rate support, feature set, interface design, and bit transparency testing built into the DAC202 should satisfy audiophiles from the most jaded old schooler to the early adopters looking to replace an existing DAC.

     

    <b>Weiss Engineering DC202 Evolution And Lineage</b>

     

    Computer audiophiles who’ve been using music servers for weeks, months, and years are likely familiar with the name Weiss Engineering and eponym Daniel Weiss. Professional engineers, even more familiar with Daniel Weiss, have used his components for decades. In fact a recent visit to Paul Stubblebine Mastering in San Francisco demonstrated Weiss Engineering’s penetration into the “audiophile" facilities where many of our favorite albums are mastered. Needless to say Daniel Weiss is one of the best engineers in the business at designing components that have made and played high quality music.

     

     

    <a href="http://images.computeraudiophile.com/graphics/2010/0617/Stubblebine/IMG_0178.JPG" class="thickbox" rel="stubblebine"><img src="http://images.computeraudiophile.com/graphics/2010/0617/Stubblebine/IMG_0178-small.jpg"></a>   <a href="http://images.computeraudiophile.com/graphics/2010/0617/Stubblebine/IMG_0179.JPG" class="thickbox" rel="stubblebine"><img src="http://images.computeraudiophile.com/graphics/2010/0617/Stubblebine/IMG_0179-small.jpg"></a>   <a href="http://images.computeraudiophile.com/graphics/2010/0617/Stubblebine/IMG_0180.JPG" class="thickbox" rel="stubblebine"><img src="http://images.computeraudiophile.com/graphics/2010/0617/Stubblebine/IMG_0180-small.jpg"></a>   <a href="http://images.computeraudiophile.com/graphics/2010/0617/Stubblebine/IMG_0181.JPG" class="thickbox" rel="stubblebine"><img src="http://images.computeraudiophile.com/graphics/2010/0617/Stubblebine/IMG_0181-small.jpg"></a>   <a href="http://images.computeraudiophile.com/graphics/2010/0617/Stubblebine/IMG_0182.JPG" class="thickbox" rel="stubblebine"><img src="http://images.computeraudiophile.com/graphics/2010/0617/Stubblebine/IMG_0182-small.jpg"></a>   <a href="http://images.computeraudiophile.com/graphics/2010/0617/Stubblebine/IMG_0183.JPG" class="thickbox" rel="stubblebine"><img src="http://images.computeraudiophile.com/graphics/2010/0617/Stubblebine/IMG_0183-small.jpg"></a>   <a href="http://images.computeraudiophile.com/graphics/2010/0617/Stubblebine/IMG_0184.JPG" class="thickbox" rel="stubblebine"><img src="http://images.computeraudiophile.com/graphics/2010/0617/Stubblebine/IMG_0184-small.jpg"></a>

     

     

     

    In June 2008 I reviewed DAC202 predecessor the <a href="http://www.computeraudiophile.com/weiss-engineering-minerva-firewire-dac-review">Minerva</a>. It was a great component but at the time options for computer audiophiles were much more limited. The Minerva was a big fish swimming in a little pond. That certainly doesn’t diminish the Minerva’s performance but it places proper perspective on my assessment. In December of the same year I reviewed the Berkeley Audio Design <a href="http://www.computeraudiophile.com/Berkeley-Audio-Design-Alpha-DAC-Review">Alpha DAC</a> and subsequently crowned it my favorite DAC. I placed the Alpha above the Minerva for a few reasons namely soundstage, volume control / preamp capability*, HDCD indicator**, and sample rate display.

     

    Nearly two years later Weiss Engineering has responded in true leapfrog fashion. The DAC202 was not built to equal the competition or as a minor tweak of the Minerva. The DAC202 was built to surpass the competition and previous Weiss DACs. After investing well over two hundred hours actively listening through the DAC202 in every sensible configuration I unequivocally state Weiss Engineering has handily surpassed the competition and all previous Weiss DACs in its class.

     

    <FONT SIZE="-2">* At the time of review the Minerva did not have volume control. Weiss Engineering did enable volume control in later releases of the Minerva, but the implementation was clearly an afterthought and awkward to use.</font>

    <FONT SIZE="-2">** The HDCD indicator on the Alpha DAC is a rudimentary indication of bit transparent audio reproduction. When playing an HDCD encoded file the indicator should illuminate. If the indicator remains dark this signifies playback is not bit transparent. However, there remains a slim chance that the indicator will illuminate without bit transparent playback. In other words, if the indicator is off and it should be on something is wrong. If the indicator is on there is a good chance playback is bit transparent, but bit transparency is not guaranteed. I have successfully played an HDCD encoded file that produced major distortion and short drop-outs yet consistently illuminated the HDCD indicator. Thus the rudimentary categorization of the HDCD indicator. </font>

     

    <b>Weiss Engineering DAC202 In Detail</b>

     

    At $6,670 USD the Weiss DAC202 has increased in price as much as performance over its predecessors. I’ll leave judgements of value up to individual readers as each of our monetary decisions involve vastly different variables. I will say a significant percentage of audiophiles have spent many times the amount of the DAC202 price premium on “upgrades" with far less overall impact.

     

    <img src="http://images.computeraudiophile.com/graphics/2010/0617/index-66.jpg" style="padding: 5pt 10pt 5pt 5pt;" align="left">The <b>fit and finish</b> of the DAC202 has been improved nicely over previous Weiss DACs. The new headphone socket, volume control, and LCD display elevate the look of this unit to the audiophile standard. The Minerva and to a much greater extent the DAC2 look very utilitarian even though their lackluster form doesn't enable enhanced function. The rear of the DAC202, although very compact, is laid out ergonomically. I had no problems during the review period inserting and removing all types of cables. The addition of a gold headphone socket to the DAC202 raises the versatility of the unit to another level. Most manufacturers don’t offer a headphone output on products at this price point. Weiss Engineering has wisely considered the continually growing high quality headphone market with the inclusion of a standard quarter-inch (<b>T</b>ip, <b>R</b>ing, and <b>S</b>leeve connector) headphone output. The addition of a rotary encoder knob, referred to here as a volume control, was a must not only to improve upon previous designs but to enable menu navigation with ease. The knob itself is of high quality and spins in the overly obvious clockwise and counter-clockwise directions using detents for every half or full db adjustment. These detents, unlike the new Antelope Zodiac DAC controls, enable the listener to recall an exact volume level when desired. In addition the volume control is used to select menu items by pushing the knob inward. The DAC202’s three inch LCD display (measured diagonally) is somewhat easy to see from a nine to twelve foot listening position and a appropriately understated when when automatically dimmed. Significant information such as volume level, phase, and filter are easily visible while the active interface and sample rate may be more difficult for some listeners to read at a distance. The display is nicely recessed into the solid aluminium faceplate. This faceplate that will also be available in black once the second production run is underway. The DAC202 ships with a nicely built substantial but not over engineered remote control. After a few hours of use the important buttons such as volume and power can be memorized as they are not lost in a sea of useless buttons. The DAC202 remote offer ten buttons, all of them either discreet or toggle selectors with the exception of volume up and down. It’s very nice to select a specific interface instead of scrolling through the list of available interfaces.

     

     

    <center><a href="http://images.computeraudiophile.com/graphics/2010/0617/DAC202-front-large.jpeg" class="thickbox" rel="dac202-hardware"><img src="http://images.computeraudiophile.com/graphics/2010/0617/DAC202-front-small.jpeg"></a>   <a href="http://images.computeraudiophile.com/graphics/2010/0617/DAC202-back-large.jpeg" class="thickbox" rel="dac202-hardware"><img src="http://images.computeraudiophile.com/graphics/2010/0617/DAC202-back-small.jpeg"></a></center>

     

     

     

    The <b>feature set and technical capabilities</b> of the Weiss DAC202 are extremely good. Directly addressing three of the four reasons I previously selected the Alpha over the Minerva are the new volume control, bit transparency check, and seemingly mundane sample rate display. In addition to these three features and capabilities the Weiss DAC202 offers a critically and consumer acclaimed asynchronous FireWire interface. The DAC is also capable of sending word clock out to an audio card in an asynchronous-like fashion. Either way the Weiss DAC202 retains the critical role of master clock.

     

    <a href="http://images.computeraudiophile.com/graphics/2010/0617/dac202-remote-large.jpeg" class="thickbox" rel="dac202-hardware"><img src="http://images.computeraudiophile.com/graphics/2010/0617/dac202-remote-small.jpeg"style="padding: 5pt 10pt 5pt 5pt;" align="left"></a>More and more audio systems consist of digital only sources and are less dependant on a traditional preamplifier. Digital to Analog converters with <b>volume control</b> have thus become increasingly popular. In 90% of audio systems this popularity (bypassing an analog preamp) serves the system well. It’s a rare occasion when inserting a preamp improves sound quality but it does happen. The volume control implemented in the Weiss DAC202 may increase that percentage to 99% because of its flexibility and superior design. The DAC202 features a coarse analog / fine digital volume control on both the main and headphone outputs. The DAC is capable of four selectable coarse settings via relay in the analog domain and fine level adjustments in the digital domain. Listeners who insist on using a preamp can defeat this level control on the main output only. One of the beauties of coarse analog level control is the capability to closely match the input sensitivity of an amplifier. My McIntosh MC275 has a sensitivity of 1.2 volts via unbalanced RCA inputs and 2.5 volts via balanced XLR inputs. Using the balanced XLR outputs of the DAC202 I set the coarse analog level to 2.12v With a closely matched voltage setting the digital volume attenuation does not have degrade the sound quality like it can with an unmatched pair of components. This matching allows use of the digital volume control over its entire range. The maximum bearable listening volume is reached at 0 db, not a level near -12 db of attenuation. For example a DAC with fixed output voltage of 6v feeding 2.5v MC275 power amplifiers will require either a preamp or major volume attenuation at the DAC to achieve proper listening levels. DACs with well implemented 32 bit or 24 bit digital only volume controls and proper dithering techniques can handle quite a bit of attenuation without deleterious effects to the sound quality <a href="http://files.computeraudiophile.com/2010/0617/Digital_Level_Control.pdf">[Digital Level Control PDF]</a>. However a coarse analog / fine digital volume control allows the ideal balance of analog voltage matching with limited or no digital attenuation or sonic degradation. The 7.6 db difference between 6v and 2.5v may seem minimal at first blush, but consider the difference just 1 db can make during listening evaluations. The DAC202’s four selectable coarse analog settings are 1.06, 2.12, 4.15, and 8.15v. The fine digital level adjustments are full db steps from -60 db through -20 db and half db steps for levels between - 20 db and 0 db of attenuation. The coarse analog / fine digital volume control is by far my favorite feature of the Weiss DAC202.

     

    A very popular question on the Computer Audiophile forum is, “How do I check for bit transparent output?" Until recently a true test of bit transparency required very expensive and sophisticated engineering test equipment. Now this test can be accomplished with a couple mouse clicks and absolutely no engineering knowledge. The Weiss DAC202 features a <b>built-in bit transparency check</b> that works in conjunction with Weiss Engineering supplied test WAV files. This feature is easily the most underrated and most needed feature in all of computer based high end audio. If the source signal is not perfect there’s no way to make it perfect down the line. Sound quality can only get worse when starting with a sample rate converted or reduced bit depth digital signal. Bit transparency is akin to playing lossless files. Most people easily realize the sonic consequences of ripping, storing, and playing lossy MP3 files. But, many people don’t realize when their bits are butchered because they’ve never heard their system produce bit transparent audio. Depending on the level of processing done to the digital signal by the computer operating system or playback application there may be no difference between the sound quality of a lossy MP3 and heavily processed non-transparent digital signal [bit opaque :~)] . Perhaps injured equally by the lack of bit transparency in user’s systems are the DAC manufacturers. Countless times I’ve talked to people who’ve completely written off great sounding DACs because of perceived poor sound quality. Yet these same users had no way of knowing if playback was bit transparent. Judging the quality of a component further down the chain with irreversibly broken, terribly processed music is a disservice to the listener, the manufacture, and anyone who comes in contact with the user’s opinion whether verbal or written online. The Alpha DAC has its HDCD indicator and as I’ve already mentioned it’s far from infallible. The Weiss DAC202’s built-in bit transparency check works because Weiss Engineering supplies audiophiles with the test audio files. The DAC202 is programmed to look for the exact bit pattern delivered in these files only when playback is bit transparent. Running the bit transparency check is quite simple. All that’s required is setting the DAC to a specific sample rate, selecting Run from the Transparency Menu on the LCD, and playing one of the test files from a computer. When playback is bit transparent the DAC202 indicates the bit depth of the given test file either 16 or 24 bits. If something on the computer isn’t configured correctly the DAC202 simply displays the word Fail. I tried to trick the DAC202 into displaying the bit transparent indicator, but I was unsuccessful after many attempts. Weiss Engineering supplies test files in both 16 and 24 bit word lengths at 44.1, 48, 88.2, 96, 176.4, 192 kHz sample rates.

     

    The third feature that formerly put the Alpha DAC over the top is a simple <b>sample rate display</b>. This seemingly mundane feature can actually help indicate software configuration problems on the fly. Displaying the sample rate of the current track is far from a perfect way to indicate bit transparency, but it’s a step in the belt and suspenders direction. This feature is mainly helpful when an audio output device such as the DAC202 is not configured for Exclusive Output Mode in Windows Vista or 7. As I recommended in my <a href="http://www.computeraudiophile.com/content/Windows-7-Audio-J-River-Media-Center-14-Configuration">Windows 7 / J River Media Center</a> article, it’s wise to set the default Windows sample rate to something like 24 bit, 48000 Hz (Studio Quality). This default format is only used in Shared Output Mode as opposed to Exclusive Output Mode. Shared Output Mode equals compromised sound quality for audiophiles. Thus, when there is an output mode software misconfiguration the Weiss DAC202 clearly indicates 48kHz on the front LCD display no matter what sample rate is actually being played. Since there is virtually no content available at 24/48kHz this is a nice indication that something is wrong.

     

    In high end audio master clocking has traditionally been reserved for the extremely exclusive components from companies like <i>d</i>CS and Esoteric. Now that computer based audio continues to gain in popularity more audiophiles are able to experience and afford a properly master clocked system via asynchronous interfaces on D to A converters. The Weiss DAC202 FireWire interface, when used in conjunction with the internal DAC202 word clock, operates asynchronously. This means the DAC202 is the master clock when playing files from a computer. Currently asynchronous interfaces are all the rage and rightly so. <b>Asynchronous transfer mode</b> can reduce timing inaccuracies by a factor of 100 in well designed DACs. The sonic benefits of certain asynchronous interfaces are well documented by listeners the world over. These positive listening experiences are also backed by solid engineering principals. In the simplest terms timing is critical to the reproduction of recorded sound involving digital to analog conversion. More accurate timing can produce more accurate sound. As of this writing all DACs using FireWire interfaces require third party software to function. The Weiss DAC202 uses a Dice FireWire chip from <a href="http://www.tcelectronic.com/">TC Electronic</a>. Weiss Engineering supplies the Dice software on a CD with the DAC202 and offers the newest versions of the Dice software via its website (password required). Installation of this software is simple frequently requiring a couple clicks and a restart. This software is completely independent of all playback applications like iTunes and J River Media Center, and doesn’t require user intervention after installation. It’s also very important to note that not all devices with FireWire interfaces operate asynchronously like the Weiss DAC202.

     

    In addition to using the DAC202 via asynchronous FireWire in master clock mode it’s possible to use the DAC202 as the <b>master clock</b> with high quality audio cards such as the Lynx AES16, RME HDSPe AES, and Merging Mykerinos. Many engineers that I’ve talked to about word clocking suggest the master clock should remain as close to the DAC as possible. Yet others are adamant about externally clocking all digital devices with a separate word clock. The DAC202 can accommodate either configuration as it offers word clock input and output. When using the word clock output the DAC202 is the master clock and sends a word clock signal to the audio card. These “slaved" audio cards are simply configured to acquire clocking information from an external source instead of using an internal clock. This method keeps the word clock as close to the DAC as possible in an asynchronous-like fashion. Listening through the Weiss DAC202 for hundreds of hours I determined this configuration sounded nearly as good as using the FireWire interface. More on that later. Like all good DAC designs the Weiss DAC202’s audio interfaces are all galvanically isolated. The BNC word clock input is not galvanically isolated.

     

    Two <b>additional differences</b> between the Minerva and the DAC202 are the newly designed analog output stages and newly designed D to A converter. Peaking inside the DAC202 one can see the nicely segregated main analog output stage. The DAC202 offers separate output stages for the main and headphone outputs. Weiss elected to use very good operational amplifiers (opamps) with a high slew rate, and a low impedance topology. According to Daniel this makes the DAC202 even more impervious to cabling and impedance mismatches between DAC and amplifier. The new redesigned D to A converter uses two converters per channel as well as separate converters for the main and headphone outputs.

     

    <b>Using The Weiss Engineering DAC202</b>

     

    There are a number of <b>DAC202 options</b> available via the front LCD display. The DAC202 User Manual is very thorough and offers a detailed technical description of each of the following options. Here is a list of the options in order and some of my notes that correspond to each option.

     

    <b>Main Screen</b>

    <ul>

    <li>Volume: -60 db to 0 db

    Full or half db steps depending on attenuation level. Matching my MC275 input voltage allowed me to listen at or near 0 db.</li>

    <li>Input Source: FireWire, AES (XLR), SPDIF (RCA), SPDIF (TOS)

    Changing the digital source is easily accomplished via the discrete remote commands, and is available via the front panel. This is done right on the main screen without any menu navigation. Software switching of the input source is not available.</li>

    <li>Sample Rate Indicator: 44.1, 48, 88.2, 96, 176.4, 192 kHz

    The sample rate cannot be changed as this is simply an indicator of the current sample rate.</li>

     

    <b>Options Menu</b>

    <li>Abs. Phase: + or -</li>

    <li>Upsample Filt.: A or B</li>

    <li>Sync Source: XLR, RCA, Toslink, WC BNC, 1394 Bus, Internal

    When using the FireWire input I use the Internal word clock exclusively. The 1394 Bus option is only used when multiple DAC202s are connected to the same computer via FireWire. One DAC would be set to Internal and the other would be slaved by setting its sync source to 1394 Bus. Using Lynx AES16 and AES16e audio cards I used both the Internal and WC BNC sync sources. Using the Lynx to send clock to the DAC202 (WC BNC) is not recommended when other options are available. The reverse, sending clock to the Lynx from the DAC is very good sounding. I also set the sync source to XLR but the auto sample rate adjustments by the DAC202 necessitate a one to two second mute while the DAC changes rates. Missing the first couple second of a track can get annoying.

    <li>Sync Rate: 44.1, 48, 88.2, 96, 176.4, 192 kHz

    This option switches the sample rate of the DAC. Manually navigating the menu is the slowest way to accomplish these changes when not running in an auto sample rate switching mode. The simplest method of changing the sample rate is via the Weiss software interface. Simply click the drop-down menu and select the desired rate. The software interface requires a FireWire connection operate although the FireWire interface doesn’t have to be used for audio. During my listening sessions with the Lynx cards running into the DAC202 via AES I always used the Weiss software interface to change the sample rate. It really made no sense to have an XLR connection if a FireWire connection is already present, but this shows the ease of which the software interface works.</li>

    <li>LCD Bright: 0-30 (15)

    I used the 15 setting as it was just bright enough to read in my rather dark listening room. This setting is only active while the LCD is in use for menu navigation or when a setting on the panel (Volume, Sample Rate) is changed. The LCD switches to the LCD Dim Level after around ten seconds.</li>

    <li>LCD Dim Lev.: 0-15 (0)

    I used this setting at 0 as I had no need to continually read the display. During settings changes the LCD illuminates so there is no need, other than aesthetic, to keep the Dim Level above 0.</li>

    <li>Dual WIre: Enabled or Disabled

    Not used for this review. The DAC202 handles all sample rates via single wire.</li>

    <li>DW WCLK: Halfrate or Audiorate

    Set to Audiorate during this review.</li>

    <li>Insert Mode: Disabled, ret. XLR, ret. RCA, ret. TOS

    This is a anti-audiophile option more likely to be used by professionals. It enabled the insertion of external devices like equalizers between the source and the DAC.</li>

    <li>Main Out Att.: Engaged or Bypassed

    I used the Engaged setting exclusively as I had no need to use a preamp between the DAC202 and amp. When set to bypassed the main volume attenuation does not work.</li>

    <li>XLR Out Lev.: 1.06, 2.12, 4.15, 8.15

    This is the very nice coarse analog setting for the main output. As I stated earlier the MC275 sensitivity is 2.5v so I set this level to 2.12.</li>

    <li>Phones Lev.: 0.2, 0.9, 5.2

    This is the coarse analog setting for the headphone output. The default is 0.2v. I used Sennheiser HD600 headphones during the review. these headphones required the 2.7v setting for comfortable listening levels while keeping full use of the fine digital volume control.</li>

    <li>Transparency: Run or Stop

    This is where the built-in transparency check is run. Selecting the Run setting and playing a Weiss supplied file is all that’s required. It’s very easy to use, but was not extremely intuitive. I did have to read the manual.</li>

     

    <b>System Info</b>

    <li>Firmware ver: 1.0.0.3</li>

    <li>SDK Version: 3.5.3.8786</li>

    <li>Model DAC_202 (0x7)</li>

    <li>Weiss OUID: 23</li>

    </ul>

     

    <b>Music Servers, Storage, And Source Material</b>

     

    During the review period I used three main music servers and three types of storage. Two Windows 7 machines, one Mac OS X computer, a NAS drive, external bus powered drive, and internal SSD.

    <ol>

    <li>The Computer Audiophile Pocket Server (C.A.P.S.) <a href="http://www.computeraudiophile.com/content/Computer-Audiophile-Pocket-Server-CAPS">[Details]</a> Since the C.A.P.S. machine does not have a FireWire port I purchased an internal PCI FireWire card to connect to the DAC202. Some CA readers have reported issues using certain FireWire chipsets. The card I purchased uses the VIA 6307 PCI to FireWire IEEE1394a controller chip and worked flawless. There was no software installation required under Windows 7. The card is manufactured by SYBA, model number SD-VIA-FW1E1H. The best part about this card is the $7.99 price from NewEgg <a href="http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16815124034">[Link]</a>. This card offers a single external FireWire 400 port and a single internal FireWire 400 header to connect a FireWire port to the computer case if necessary.

    <li>MacBook Pro 13" [Model Identifier: MacBookPro5,5] running Mac OS X 10.6.3 and 10.6.4 Snow Leopard. An Intel Core 2 Duo processor running at 2.26 GHz and 4 GB of RAM. The internal Solid State Drive (SSD) is a 120 GB OCZ Vertex Turbo (MLC). Amarra version 2.0, iTunes 9.2 (61), and Songbird 1.7.3 Build 1700. To connect the DAC202 I started by using a noname FireWire 800 to 400 converter and a Monster Cable FireWire 400 to 400 (6 pin to 6 pin) cable. Most of my listening through this MacBook was done on battery power only and wired Ethernet or no network connection at all.</li>

    <li>MacBook Pro 13" [Model Identifier: MacBookPro5,5] running Windows 7 Ultimate 32 Bit. An Intel Core 2 Duo processor running at 2.26 GHz and 4 GB of RAM. The internal Solid State Drive (SSD) is a 120 GB OCZ Vertex Turbo (MLC). J River Media Center v14 and v15. Started using a noname FireWire 800 to 400 converter. After a few issues where the DAC202 disappeared from the computer I switched to a single FireWire 800 to 400 cable. This did not resolve the issue 100% but I am currently unable to reproduce the issue at the time of this writing. The issue was only present under Windows 7. According the Weiss FireWire software the following informatioin is available about the drivers and FireWire chipset in my MacBook Pro. Drivers - Microsoft 1394ohci.sys [6.1.7600.16385], Microsoft ohci1394.sys [6.1.7600.16385] (legacy), Microsoft 1394bus.sys [6.1.7600.16385] (legacy). I tried all three even though they look awfully similar. OHCI 1394 Host Controller - Vendor : (11C1) LSI (Agere, Lucent), Chipset: (5901) FW643, Revision: 07, Status : Active, Details: Subsysten VendorId: 11c1, Subsystem DeviceId: 5900, Max # isoch Rx contexts: 8, Max # isoch Tx contexts: 8, Max 1394 Speed Capability: S800, Support: Compatible, no known issues. Most of my listening through this MacBook was done on battery power only and wired Ethernet or no network connection at all.</li>

    <li>I used three different NAS drives during this review. A. Thecus N5200B Pro, B. QNAP TS-559 Turbo NAS Pro, and C. Synology DS710+.</li>

    <li>The external drive used was an Oyen Digital MiniPro 750GB 5400RPM External 2.5-in FireWire 800/400, USB Portable Hard Drive <a href="http://oyendigital.com/hard-drives/store/CB2-54-750-M.html">[Link]</a>. This drive is powered from the USB or FireWire bus and uses the Oxford 934 chipset (OXUF934SSA). A switching power supply is available but not recommended for high end audio applications. I had success using the daisy chain capability of FireWire when connecting this FireWire 800 drive directly to the MacBook Pro and connecting the DAC202 via FireWire 400 to 800 cable to the drive. Note the faster FireWire devices should be connected closer to the computer when daisy chaining with devices of differing speeds.</li>

    </ol>

     

    Much of the source material used during this review was either 16/44.1 kHz or 24/96 kHz, with a small dusting of 24/176.4 kHz HRx material. 90% of the files were encoded in FLAC and copied to memory before playback in J River Media Center. The main Windows audio output method used was WASAPI. ASIO and Kernel Streaming both worked just as good as WASAPI through JRMC v15. I was unable to discern a sonic difference during the review period between either of the three output methods.

     

    During the course of the review I up the firmware and Weiss software once. The process was simple. A rare software bug that only manifest itself under a twisted concoction of configuration changes was fixed and there was no change in sound quality.

     

     

    <a href="http://images.computeraudiophile.com/graphics/2010/0617/weiss001.PNG" class="thickbox" rel="dac202"><img src="http://images.computeraudiophile.com/graphics/2010/0617/weiss001-small.png"></a>   <a href="http://images.computeraudiophile.com/graphics/2010/0617/weiss002.PNG" class="thickbox" rel="dac202"><img src="http://images.computeraudiophile.com/graphics/2010/0617/weiss002-small.png"></a>   <a href="http://images.computeraudiophile.com/graphics/2010/0617/weiss003a.PNG" class="thickbox" rel="dac202"><img src="http://images.computeraudiophile.com/graphics/2010/0617/weiss003a-small.png"></a>   <a href="http://images.computeraudiophile.com/graphics/2010/0617/weiss004a.PNG" class="thickbox" rel="dac202"><img src="http://images.computeraudiophile.com/graphics/2010/0617/weiss004a-small.png"></a>   <a href="http://images.computeraudiophile.com/graphics/2010/0617/weiss005.PNG" class="thickbox" rel="dac202"><img src="http://images.computeraudiophile.com/graphics/2010/0617/weiss005-small.png"></a>   <a href="http://images.computeraudiophile.com/graphics/2010/0617/weiss006.PNG" class="thickbox" rel="dac202"><img src="http://images.computeraudiophile.com/graphics/2010/0617/weiss006-small.png"></a>   <a href="http://images.computeraudiophile.com/graphics/2010/0617/weiss003b.PNG" class="thickbox" rel="dac202"><img src="http://images.computeraudiophile.com/graphics/2010/0617/weiss003b-small.png"></a>   <a href="http://images.computeraudiophile.com/graphics/2010/0617/weiss004b.PNG" class="thickbox" rel="dac202"><img src="http://images.computeraudiophile.com/graphics/2010/0617/weiss004b-small.png"></a>

     

     

     

    <b>Weiss DAC202 Sound Quality</b>

     

    During the several weeks I spent listening to the DAC202 there was nothing more I wanted to talk about then its sound quality. I enjoyed being contacted by Weiss dealers, who had yet to receive their DAC202s, to discuss how good this DAC sounds. The DAC202 actually takes the cake for the component I’ve spent the most time listening through. Even after removing my reviewer’s hat for the evening I often felt compelled to listen to more music. I’ve had other components in here that enabled me to listen to a lot of music, but nothing like the DAC202 that compelled me to listen. Listening critically to more music that sounds fabulous elevates the whole experience to another level. It seems like every time I listened it was critical and in a good way. I was sucked into the music, yet I could explain the detail that I was hearing in every instrument. At no time did I listen to the DAC202 and get sidetracked by life’s daily distractions. After listening to several other components over the years I clearly remember not being able to answer sound quality questions until I sat down with a notebook and scratched a few words on paper. The music definitely leaves an imprint on one’s mind when listening through the DAC202.

     

    The two sonic characteristics that won’t leave my mind for a long time are full, vibrant, and cohesive soundstage, and fabulous, full, nonbloated, midrange that’s to die for. The aforementioned adjectives are what the music sounds through the DAC202, not what the DAC202 sounds like. It just doesn’t seem right to discuss the sound of a component when the music is all I could thinnk about. I won’t even suggest the DAC202 is without a sonic signature. In fact all of this describes its sonic signature. It’s just that the music is what sticks in my head. The DAC202 has a way of presenting the music instead of presenting itself. Listening to the 24/96 download of <a href="https://www.hdtracks.com/index.php?file=catalogdetail&valbum_code=HD00731454330428">Ella and Louis</a> over and over again caused me to chuckle a bit in my listening chair. When something sounds good it’s hard not to get giddy. The coherency and illusionary image presented when listening to this album was astounding. Shelby Lynne’s new album <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Tears-Lies-Alibis-Shelby-Lynne/dp/B0039ZF86E/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=music&qid=1276821794&sr=1-1">Tears, Lies, and Alibis</a>, mixed by Al Schmitt at Capitol Studios in Hollywood and mastered by Doug Sax & Sonny Nam at the Mastering Lab in Ojai, California, sounded superb through the DAC202. I felt as though I could hear everything. Like nothing was really between me and the music. The midrange detail that came through reminded me of the Shelby Lynne concert I attended May 2nd, 2010 at the small Dakota Bar and Grill in Minneapolis. In no way was my system producing sound as real as the concert, but the thought to compare live v. recorded Shelby Lynne entered my mind several times.

     

    Since the DAC202 supports all reasonable sample rates including 176.4 and 192 I could listen to my Reference Recordings HRx material in its native resolution. My go-to album Crown Imperial by the Dallas Wind Symphony (<a href="http://www.referencerecordings.com/HRxORDER.asp">HR-112</a>) revealed a bit more about the Weiss DAC202. The higher frequencies are smooth yet accurate as far as I can tell. This smoothness is possibly rounding the leading edge of transients. I say possibly because my McIntosh MC275 tube amplifier isn’t known for tack sharp transients and ear piercing pings. The bottom and mid to lower frequencies appeared to be right-on. I didn’t notice any annoying bass exaggeration or emphasis. I’m guessing the low jitter FireWire interface has a lot to do with this low end clarity and appropriate punch. Listening to Marcus Miller’s Silver Rain album, specifically track one, through the Weiss DAC202 is enough to solidify anyone’s opinion that this DAC has great control in the bottom end.

     

    The best sounding interface to listen through was FireWire. Using a Lynx AES16 card into the DAC202’s AES/EBU input and slaved to the DAC202’s word clock was a close second place. The externally clocked Lynx configuration just wasn’t as cohesive as listening through the FireWire interface. The Lynx was a bit sloppy sounding. Plus, the FireWire interface is incredibly convenient compared to a Lynx card and only requires a computer with a FireWire port not a PCI slot.

     

    The fourth factor I considered back in December 2008 that sunk the Minerva in my mythical rankings was its soundstage. In the Alpha DAC review I said, <i>“In my opinion the major sonic difference between the two [Alpha and Minerva] is soundstage...The Minerva has a much more focused soundstage that may be narrow to some listeners. On the other hand this focussed and tight soundstage is exactly what some listeners are seeking. In a way the Minerva is like plugging into the soundboard to make a live recording and the Alpha DAC is like placing microphones elsewhere in the venue. “</i> Comparing the soundstage of the Alpha to that of the DAC202 was almost painful for me. The Alpha has been my old faithful for a couple years. It’s always been an overachiever. After listening to the DAC202 for long enough it was time to face the music. The DAC202 has a much more cohesive soundstage than the Alpha and has lost any overly narrow characteristics present in the Minerva. Comparing recording after recording revealed the same results. The appropriately sized and high cohesivity of the DAC202’s soundstage and its superior imaging schooled the Alpha DAC.

     

    <b>Are We There Yet?</b>

     

    <a href="http://images.computeraudiophile.com/ca/cash-logo-black.png" class="thickbox" rel="cash"><img src="http://images.computeraudiophile.com/ca/cash-logo-black-thumb.jpg" style="padding: 2pt 5pt 2pt 2pt;" align="left" alt="CASH-List"></a>Back to the hovering question. Are we there yet? The combination of a good Windows 7 or Mac server and the Weiss Engineering DAC202 is enough to transport anyone into the world of high end computer audio. The DAC202’s support of all reasonable sample rates via a ubiquitous and low jitter asynchronous FireWire interface, impeccably implemented coarse analog / fine digital volume control, built-in transparency checking, sample rate display, and sound quality to plan this year’s bonus around make it the vehicle that gets anyone “There" and well beyond the capabilities of traditional transports. The DAC202 not only offers all the features required for the foreseeable future it’s the sound quality valedictorian of its class and the latest entrant to the <a href="http://www.computeraudiophile.com/content/Computer-Audiophile-Suggested-Hardware-List">C.A.S.H. List</a>. Now that we’ve answered the “are we there yet" question it’s time to ask, What are you waiting for?

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Product Information

    <ul>

    <li>Price - $6,670</li>

    <li>DAC202 Product Page - <a href="http://www.weiss-highend.ch/dac202/index.html">Link</a></li>

    <li>DAC202 Product Brochure - <a href="http://files.computeraudiophile.com/2010/0617/dac202-brochure.pdf">Link</a></li>

    <li>DAC202 Manual - <a href="http://files.computeraudiophile.com/2010/0617/dac202-manual.pdf">Link</a></li>

    </ul>

     

     

    Associated Equipment:

     

    <a href="http://files.computeraudiophile.com/2010/0418/Brochure_Fidelio.pdf">Verity Audio Fidelio loudspeakers</a>, <a href="http://www.mcintoshlabs.com/products/mcintosh-mc275-vacuum-tube-power-amplifier.asp">McIntosh MC275 amplification</a>, <a href="http://www.richardgrayspowercompany.com/products.aspx?type=accessories">Richard Gray's Power Company High Tension Wires</a>, <a href="http://www.berkeleyaudiodesign.com/">Berkeley Audio Design Alpha DAC</a>, <a href="http://www.usbdacs.com/Products/Products.html">Wavelength Audio Proton</a>, <a href="http://www.ayre.com/products_detail.cfm?productid=12">Ayre AX-7e Integrated Amp</a>, <a href="http://www.computeraudiophile.com/content/Computer-Audiophile-Pocket-Server-CAPS">C.A.P.S. server</a>, <a href="http://www.belcantodesign.com/Product_USBlink.html">Bel Canto USB Link</a>, <a href="http://www.halidedesign.com/bridge/">Halide Design Bridge</a>, <a href="http://www.dcsltd.co.uk/product/debussy-dac"><i>d</i>CS Debussy DAC</a>, <a href="http://www.dcsltd.co.uk/product/puccini-u-clock"><i>d</i>CS Puccini U-Clock</a>, <a href="http://www.kimber.com/products/interconnects/digital/usb/bbus/cu/">Kimber USB Cu</a>, <a href="http://www.kimber.com/products/interconnects/digital/usb/bbus/ag/">Kimber USB Ag</a>, <a href="http://www.benchmarkmedia.com/system1/digital-analog-converter/dac1-pre">Benchmark DAC1 PRE</a>, <a href="http://www.kimber.com/products/interconnects/analog/select/singleended/ks1011/">Kimber Select KS1011 Analog Cables</a>, <a href="http://www.kimber.com/products/interconnects/digital/select/ks2020/">Kimber Select KS2020 Digital Cable</a>, <a href="http://www.kimber.com/products/loudspeakercables/monocle/x/">Kimber Monocle X Loudspeaker Cable</a>, <a href="http://usa.asus.com/product.aspx?P_ID=SPZfqXDJvadmFPoh&templete=2">ASUS Xonar HDAV 1.3 Slim</a>, <a href="http://www.apple.com/ipad/">Apple iPad</a>, <a href="http://www.amarraaudio.com/">Sonic Studio's Amarra</a>, <a href="http://www.m2tech.biz/products.html">M2Tech hiFace</a>, <a href="http://www.weiss-highend.ch/dac202/index.html">Weiss Engineering DAC202</a>, <a href="http://www.lynxstudio.com/product_detail.asp?i=13">Lynx Studio AES16 Digital I/O Card</a>.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     




    User Feedback

    Recommended Comments



    <br />

    The problem with double blind studies is they demonstrate that much of what the high end audio industry is selling is actually a myth. Take three DACs, two in over 5k category, and a good one for a 1k or so, I’ll bet my bicycle seat all the “golden ears” can’t tell the difference. It’s amazing how sound quality improves when listeners see the price tag. <br />

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    ArtK - Do you have any data to base your opinion on or are you just using your hearing and listening skills to make generalizations across an entire industry?

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    Pretty much every review I’ve ever read is measurement free, just full of anecdotal value judgments. My anecdote is from my local Hi End retail store. They were dutifully demonstrating how a very well know 5k DAC sounded so much better than a unit a quarter it’s cost. I got lucky; the sale person got called away for a few minutes so I had a chance to swap cables. The sale person came back and continued point out the flaws of what was actually the high priced spread but he thought was the cheap unit. He would then switch to the cheaper unit, thinking it was the high priced spread, and point out its superior attributes. Just one more anecdote for an industry built on anecdotes.

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    That's the general consensus anyway. Ostensibly, DBTs have been performed where an analog signal has been "round-tripped" in a series of 10 modestly priced ADC/DACs and then compared to the original analog signal and no one, in dozens of tries, could tell the difference between the original analog program and the same program that had gone through 10 conversions! Kind of hard to believe, isn't it?<br />

    <br />

    A good discussion on listening biases and how they affect people's perceptions can be found at: <br />

    <br />

    />

    <br />

    Very interesting. I'm going to take a previous poster's advice and go read the discussion on this site about the "fallacy of DBT in audio evaluation" (if I can find the thread).

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    Art - Your anecdote is just another shortsighted claptrap that proves nothing except your desire to troll forums and retail stores (if the story is actually true).<br />

    <br />

    Computer Audiophile is for people who enjoy this wonderful hobby and see tremendous value in improving our music listening experience. Based on all your posts here you clearly have an insurmountable grudge against the industry even though it is no different than every other luxury goods industry. Your continued comments tell much more about you than the subject matter in the comments. <br />

    <br />

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    Would love to see how long Art could ride his bike before he had to sit on the remaining post after losing his seat!

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    Art<br />

    I describe myself as a recovering audiophile.<br />

    I’m also fascinated by DBT and I much prefer to trust what can be measured. <br />

    I’ve been a Hi Fi and music enthusiast for over 25 years and I still read reviews (even though I think they’re pretty pointless) buy the occasional component and thoroughly enjoy the whole process. I build rather than buy these days and spend many happy hours tinkering with what I have hoping that somewhere I’ll improve the sound I can hear. I try not to take it all too seriously and bear in mind what I hear may not be what another does.<br />

    As Chris points out it’s no different from any other luxury market and if it gives people pleasure spending their money on expensive Hi Fi I don’t have problem with that and neither should you.<br />

    It helps our economies, provides entertainment, brings people with a common interest together and most importantly, hopefully gets people listening to music and anything that does that in my eyes can’t be a bad thing.<br />

    Here everyone is given a chance to state their opinion. However, if you wander into a church and shout “there is no god” you can hardly expect not to get stones thrown at you.<br />

    These people are enjoying themselves discussing an expensive Dac. I may not think it’s worth the money and you obviously don’t. But, isn’t it easier to leave them to it?<br />

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    George said, "I'm going to take a previous poster's advice and go read the discussion on this site about the "fallacy of DBT in audio evaluation". I've got some better advice. Leave this forum and don't come back. You are wasting our time.<br />

    <br />

    You used an anecdote. Here's one for you. Before CES we set up our system for three weeks to fully burn in. During that time I became very familiar with the way it sounded. When I got to the show, our crew had the system all set up to duplicate the sound we got at the shop.<br />

    <br />

    But something was wrong. It just didn't sound right. I listened to several CD's to be sure. Then we started trying to figure out what the problem was. At first we were focused on the room acoustics, trying different absorbers. Nothing worked.<br />

    <br />

    Then after four hours, in frustration I leaned against the wall and kicked the floor. As I looked down, there was one power cord (for the preamp) that was missing ONE wood block that held it off the carpet. We put that wood block in and everything was fine. Sounded just like it did at the factory.<br />

    <br />

    Explain that one to me. I can't. I don't even know how wood blocks work....

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    anecdote antidote or is it just another story?

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    <I>"I've got some better advice. Leave this forum and don't come back. You are wasting our time."</I><br />

    <br />

    That's a bit harsh Charlie. In person George seems like an amicable guy. We met in San Jose last week.

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    <i><br />

    "Explain that one to me. I can't. I don't even know how wood blocks work...."<br />

    <br />

    </i><br />

    <br />

    The snake oil was just working as claimed.

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    Anything special needed?<br />

    <br />

    What is included in the box?

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    Hi jhbpa - I'm not sure if a FireWire cable is included in the box because I picked up the unit from another manufacturer who "intercepted" it on the way to me. The cable I really like when using the DAC202 with a newer Mac is a simple FireWire 800 to FireWire 400 (9 pin to 6 pin). Here is the one I used -> http://www.microcenter.com/single_product_results.phtml?product_id=0315146<br />

    <br />

    I also have a Monster Cable FireWire 400 cable that I used with my PC and it worked just the same.

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    >> That's a bit harsh Charlie. In person George seems like an amicable guy. <<<br />

    <br />

    I'm not saying that George isn't a nice guy. But it's clear that he has zero interest in improving the sound of his system.<br />

    <br />

    You probably weren't around to see those kind of people turn the first audio discussion group (on the Usenet, remember that?), rec.audio.high-end, into a cesspool of bickering. It's a strange mentality when one believes everything sounds the same and yet that person spends their time on audio forums where people discuss the different sound of components.<br />

    <br />

    Other forums have had to restrict the discussion of double-blind testing to specific forums to prevent chaos from taking over. But it's your forum, so you should run it as you see fit.

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    >> The snake oil was just working as claimed. <<<br />

    <br />

    Gosh, what an insightful comment!<br />

    <br />

    Instead of being snide, why don't you open up your mind? Go down to Target and spend $15 on the game called Jenga. Inside are 50 wood blocks. Prop them under all of your cables, interconnects, and power cords so that they are not touching the ground.<br />

    <br />

    Then get back to us. If you can't hear the difference, you can always just play the game. If you don't like games, give it to a nephew or something. C'mon. It's only $15. Give it a try!

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    weasel grease, full moon rituals, sacrificing virgins, etc.<br />

    If it might improve my enjoyment of music, I'll give it a try.

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    "I'm not saying that George isn't a nice guy. But it's clear that he has zero interest in improving the sound of his system."<br />

    <br />

    I don't see how you can say, from what I've written, that I have zero interest in improving the sound of my system.<br />

    <br />

    My original post was to ask Chris what he thought of the fact that many very well conducted double-blind and ABX tests have shown, that when listeners didn't know what they were listening to, all differences between DACs disappeared. <br />

    <br />

    I never even said that *I* believed it. <br />

    <br />

    But I am an engineer and I do understand electrical theory and psychoacoustics. I do know that there is a such thing as sighted and expectational bias, and that human beings are VERY susceptible to it and no one is immune. Now, I have heard many DACs and I think they all sound different in spite of the conventional wisdom that says otherwise.<br />

    <br />

    In fact, my own DAC, (a Sonic Frontiers DAC 2.6) was recently upgraded by me from a pair of Burr-Brown OPA134s in the output to a pair of National LME49710s. The difference was immediately noticed not just by me, but by several friends. The main difference between the two op-amps were that the Nattys had much lower noise (2 µV/root Hz vs. 8 µV/root Hz) and this we could hear in quiet passages, and the LME 49710s were designed to have symmetrical slew rates while the OPA134s were not. This manifested itself in greater sense of clarity which one would expect due to much lower distortion. In fact, the low distortion advertised for these National op-amps is what caused me to change out the Burr-Browns for them. I would liked to have done a DBT between a DAC 2.6 with the original op-amps in them and my modified unit, but unfortunately, I know of no one who owns another DAC 2.6, and the time it would take to swap-out the op-amps in my unit would negate any semblance of accurate aural memory and it would be hard to disguise the "surgery" between listening sessions anyway. I have listened long and hard to this modified unit and have DBT'd it against a friend's older MSB unit. I recall that they were virtually indistinguishable from each other before I modified my 2.6, and my DAC now sounds much cleaner than his MSB. So I'm pretty satisfied that this upgrade was not merely a placebo. <br />

    <br />

    On the other hand, I also know that audio is simply not that difficult to quantify, amplify, or transmit. Compared to many signal types, audio, due to it's low frequency bandwidth does not tax conductors, amplifiers or digital processors. Collective electronics knowledge understands and has modeled every single aspect having to do with the capture, storage, retrieval and amplification of audio frequencies. We know, for instance, that at audio frequencies, and for relatively short runs (less than 20 feet, for instance) there is nothing that one can do to wire and connectors ALONE that would have the slightest effect on the audio signal being passed. If an interconnect or a speaker cable can alter any parameter in any way which would have any affect on the sound of an audio system, then those cables are not just cables, but are designed purposely to be filters and that can easily be measured. <br />

    <br />

    I am very interested in making my system sound more like real, live music. I am a recording engineer who started making live recordings because I thought I could do better than commercial releases. I have proven, to my satisfaction, at least, that I can. The better my system sounds, the more like the real event my recordings sound. But I know that some things simply cannot be true and usually these things can be proven by a simple DBT. Either they make a difference in a double-blind environment, or they don't.<br />

    <br />

    What bothers me the most about the previous poster's comment that I "obviously" have no interest in improving the sound of my system is the implicit admonition contained in that sentence which basically says "Our minds are made up, there is no place here for opinions other than the "party line", and your comments, especially those which ask the hard questions, are not wanted here."<br />

    <br />

    I hope that I am wrong about this. Believe me, I know what you are saying about rec.audio.high-end but I am NOT Arny Kruger and I do want to discuss the sound of different components.

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    "But I know that some things simply cannot be true and usually these things can be proven by a simple DBT"<br />

    <br />

    How can you "know" this? Respectfully, this "knowledge" that you appear to be referring to is exactly the problem when closed minded engineers approach audio design. They assume that they "know" and can measure everything about audio signals. This point of view is neither accurate, nor scientific in nature. True scientists accept that they "know" very little, and remain open to possibilities of learning more.<br />

    Talented audio designers accept that they do not "know" everything, and are open to listening, experimenting, and learning about what approaches may sound better.<br />

    The thread on blind testing is here:<br />

    <br />

    http://www.computeraudiophile.com/content/Controversy-ABX-testing

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    Audio is so magical that signals that are electrically identical, and sound the same when you don’t model and price of the equipment, suddenly change when you know the price tag? Science doesn’t mean you’re open to any unfounded crackpot idea. Ideas require independent validation. If you can’t discern differences by measurement and you can’t discern differences by repeatable verifiable testing, than you’re claiming magic.<br />

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    Are you saying that there aren't things that you just know? For instance, you KNOW (one would hope) that you cannot fly by jumping off a roof and flapping your arms. If you're trying to say that all one needs to do is "open one's mind" in order to fly like this, I invite you to try it first, and then get back to me. :^)<br />

    <br />

    But seriously, have you ever seen a cable manufacturer try to explain why his cables "sound better" than than the competition? It's all technobabble. He can't explain it. There's nothing to explain. If expensive cables can remove distortion, flatten frequency response, "time-align" the signals passing through them, you would think that the companies making the cables would have ground-breaking research into conductors which would spill-over into other disciplines where signal "purity" would be crucial, maybe even life-saving. But these cable companies like Nordost and Kimber et al don't even have patents on these "breakthroughs" in wire design. Because there are none. <br />

    <br />

    I agree that we don't know everything, I certainly don't, but I suspect that a lot of these "talented audio designers" of which you speak are trying to sell components in a very narrow and highly competitive market where product differentiation is the difference between success and failure.<br />

    <br />

    I know several well known and extremely talented audio designers. They use the best materials available, the best components and the latest devices in time-proven circuit configurations in order to get the best out of their products. They will be the first to tell you that there is no magic involved, simply sound engineering practices and the highest quality components and build methodologies. <br />

    <br />

    BTW, Thanks for the link to the DBT debate.

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    Yes... measurements need to be very accurate and resolve closely to that of the human listening experience.<br />

    In a nutshell, the detection needs to be at this level:<br />

    <br />

    - The threshold of hearing corresponds to air vibrations on the order of a tenth of an atomic diameter.<br />

    <br />

    - 130db Dynamic Range<br />

    <br />

    - Pitch discrimination within 1Hz (or better) (A good oscillator can do this, OK)<br />

    <br />

    Until instruments that can *really* measure the same as our hearing, then we determine sound differences by measurement. The difficulty is that once the signals leave the ear for processing by the grey matter, all sorts of variables start to manifest themselves, which are clearly *undefinable* at best and could never be standardised. <br />

    <br />

    It is easy to measure audio criteria with microphones, and spectrum analysers, distortion meters but they don't come close to human hearing, never will. It's a very rough measurement in comparison. <br />

    <br />

    In summary there will always be differences in audio perception to different people, even when the rough measurements are taken into account (generally). Whether DAC A is better than DAC B is a choice up to you, ultimately, or what you can live with that makes you enjoy music between the two. <br />

    <br />

    The difficulty these days is that the world is close on the internet, yet many brick and tile dealers don't have the range to stock what's totally on the net. <br />

    <br />

    It's forums like this one, where collective opinions can make some sense of at least to try and find a solution for computer audio. Daniel Weiss has by all accounts improved on his previous DACs with some fortitude, yet the tall poppy syndrome prevails to a degree. Pity the new Weiss DAc is so expensive, there's no way I could justify one in my living room, but the DAC does provide a new reference level for which Weiss needs to be recognised, and that's a good thing. <br />

    It keeps the competition on their toes and for us audiophiles, something to natter about and contemplate when to open the wallet..<br />

    <br />

    Cheers,<br />

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    If you genuinely want to see an engineer talk about the physics behind cable technology and see actual electrical specs on cables, I'd recommend you pay a visit to the Cardas site. George Cardas is not a snake oil salesman. <br />

    <br />

    Being an engineer, I'm more comfortable with his products and how he presents and discusses them than the majority of cable manufacturers, though I do have Ayre cables also, which are developed by Ayre (yes, that includes a lot of listening tests) but built by Cardas. Even within the Cardas product lines, there are significant differences, and which ones will be the best choice depends on the overall system configuration, so while there are systems that work well with Cardas Golden Preference, I generally prefer Golden Reference and Cardas Clear, if the budget permits. <br />

    <br />

    Naturally, if you don't hear any difference between these and 12 gauge zip cord from Home Depot in your system, you can save yourself a lot of money. It's like the difference between how a recent speaker design I completed sounds in a system at my ex's oldest sister, versus what it sounds like at home. For some reason, there seems to be a difference between what the Technics receiver and CD player sounds like, versus a Berkeley Alpha DAC and an all Ayre amplification path. And with that Technics receiver, you won't hear meaningful differences between AWG14 zip cord and Cardas cables, in all likelihood. In the bigger system, with these specific two ways, I can reliably identify the difference between Cardas Golden Reference speaker cables and Cardas Golden Presence (preferring the former). <br />

    <br />

    But then, even the ex inlays understand and have experienced it, as her son has an Ayre Integrated and a decent mid fi DAC, a PS-Audio DL-III, and this is also, to their non audiophile ears, in a different class from the Technics equipment. <br />

    <br />

    But of course, all DACs and amplifiers sound the same, don't they? ;^)

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    "If expensive cables can remove distortion, flatten frequency response, "time-align" the signals passing through them, you would think that the companies making the cables would have ground-breaking research into conductors which would spill-over into other disciplines where signal "purity" would be crucial, maybe even life-saving. But these cable companies like Nordost and Kimber et al don't even have patents on these "breakthroughs" in wire design. Because there are none."<br />

    <br />

    Nordost also makes very special wiring for aerospace (used in the space shuttle project as one example) and high tech medical devices (including wiring used inside the body for prosthesis). While I agree that some cable companies are suspect in the marketing technobabble, Nordost is not one of those companies, and, they are pioneering new ways to measure cables using actual music signals and time delay analysis to support their theories on cable design (this is also a joint project, funded by Nordost and one of their competitors, so not just self serving). Of course a cable cannot "time align" a signal, but it can do less damage in the time domain than a competing design.<br />

    <br />

    RE: audio design engineers, how do you feel about feedback? It is generally accepted by most well respected audio designers that high amounts of loop feedback sound bad, but measurements "prove" that large amounts of feedback "improve" performance. Magic? Placebo?, or is there just something about audio signal reproduction which is not entirely understood or measureable at this time?

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    I used to work in an avionics communications Research and Development Dept developing aircraft and tank communication systems and I don’t remember any particularly special cables being used.<br />

    I would have thought in such applications everything that could contribute to the clarity of communications was pretty vital.<br />

    It was hard enough just to get a set of commonly used directions and instructions understood in these environments particularly when the operators were under stress. <br />

    Maybe a lot has changed since then<br />

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    Chris-<br />

    Do you desire to have a rule about no discussions of 'whether cables have a voice' in any discussion except a designated 'Do cables have a voice?'chat.<br />

    <br />

    I would like that rule. Can we vote on it? These 'do cables sound different' discussions and their protagonists are the most inane discussions and they keep turning up in my mail in box.<br />

    <br />

    Gordon<br />

    <br />

    PS: Do cables sound different? Yes. Cables do sound different because they filter differently. <br />

    Have experimental results been confusing? Yes. There are listener biases, and experimental flaws, and information overload that confuse some experimental studies? <br />

    <br />

    What to do?<br />

    <br />

    Trust your ears. If you can't hear the difference, don't buy the cable. If you can hear the difference and the difference is important to you, buy the cable. <br />

    <br />

    Why make it more complicated? It's a hobby and supposed to bring pleasure. It's not right or wrong. It's a hobby and a process. It gives pleasure when you don't obsess about it. <br />

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