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    The Computer Audiophile

    APL Hi-Fi DSD-MR DAC and DNP-SR Streamer Full Review

    A few months ago I received a message from a friend who is also a long time Audiophile Style reader @joelha. The message was about a new DAC that I just "had to hear." Not only that but it was from a Bulgarian company I'd never even heard of in all my audio travels and research. Oh great I thought, another DAC I just had to hear. Let me check my inbox for all the great DACs I just had to hear and put it in line to be looked at as soon as I have free time (never). 

     

    I have countless message from friends, colleagues, manufacturers, distributors, etc... about products I just "have to hear." This is a first world problem of the highest order, but it's a problem nonetheless. It's hard to find the signal in all the noise. When I decide to take a chance on one of these products, I have to get the whole story about the product and company and I must understand the motivation of the person recommending the product. My decision to bring the product in for review comes down to trust above anything else. I have to trust the person on the other end of the email/phone.  

     

    In this instance, I absolutely trusted the person who contacted me about products from APL Hi-Fi. I gave him the green light to help me get the products here for review. What follows is my review of the stunning DSD-MR digital to analog converter and DNP-SR Streamer.

     

     

     

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    I'll start with the DSD-MR (DSD-Master Reference) DAC. It's nice when I can review components without first knowing too much about the price or the design. In this case I actually don't know how much the DSD-MR costs. I've been told it's expensive, but that's a relative term if there ever was one. As part of my purposeful ignorance I also didn't inquire about the design of the DAC until weeks after I'd received the unit. I wanted to put many hours of listening behind me before I asked APL Hi-Fi for additional information. Partly because I didn't want to be influenced by this information and partly because it's fun to listen and venture a guess as to what's going on inside that's contributing to the sound outside. 

     

    Let's skip the main course for now and get right to dessert. The APL Hi-Fi DSD-MR is one of the most unique sounding and enjoyable DACs I've ever heard. To eliminate any ambiguity, by enjoyable I mean one of the best I've ever heard. I don't write reviews that force people to read between lines. I say exactly what I mean. The APL Hi-Fi is one of the best DACs I've ever heard, and I've heard way more than I can count. From flagship to fledgling and everything in between, I've heard most of the offerings from most of the companies in the industry over the last ten years. I can conclude without a doubt the DSD-MR is in my top five and may be the most memorable of all. 

     

    I listened to every type of music in my collection through the DSD-MR. I'm sure many audiophiles can relate to getting a new piece of gear that's so good one just has to listen to "everything" to "see" how it sounds through component X or loudspeaker Y. From minute one with the DSD-MR I knew it was special. I can't think of another DAC that sounds like this one. The DSD-MR sounds more like analog tape and vinyl records than anything I've ever heard. Period.

     

    Listening to the entire Gary Karr: Bass Virtuoso album several times, I heard shades of the Schiit Yggdrasil through the DSD-MR, but only shades. I remember how much I loved the sound of this album through the Yggy, but the love and appreciation I have for this album now that I've spent so much time listening through the DSD-MR is much greater. Karr manages to pull every sonic attribute out of his double bass on this recording and it sounds so lush through the DSD-MR. I didn't think it was possible to hear a sip of sweetness, a bit of bloom, and delicate details simultaneously throughout the entire 40Hz to 400Hz frequency range of the double bass. They seem mutually exclusive until one spends time with the DSD-MR. 

     

    Track one on this album, named Sonata, reminds me of an Itzhak Perlman emotional rollercoaster. It's a winding road with ups and downs that are nothing but pleasure for the ears. Somehow the APL Hi-FI DSD-MR manages to squeeze more emotion out of this track than any other DAC I've heard. I know it may sound funny, but this is an emotional DAC. 

     

    Over the last couple months, I've sat down with a hot pot of black darjeeling tea and listened to entire albums, like Bass Virtuoso from Gary Karr, several times. The DSD-MR has figuratively pulled me into my listening chair more than any product in the last few years. The sweet sound from this DAC is like a drug of which I can't get enough. 

     

    Track three on Bass Virtuoso, Valse Miniature, demonstrates one attribute of the DSD-MR that I haven't heard in another product. I can describe this only as vibrancy without distractions. This recording is full of tape hiss and this hiss is clearly audible. It doesn't bother me in the least. In fact it lets me know I'm getting everything from the recording rather than getting only what some de-noising plugin let through as music. Now here's the twist, through the DSD-MR the vibrancy of Karr's double bass stands out so much from the noise that it's almost three dimensional. The tape noise is in the background and it nearly falls off my listening radar. I can't describe this as blacker blacks and a lower noise floor because I don't think that's what's going on here. For some wonderful reason the noise disappears and the music is seriously front and center. 

     

    I could write about the aforementioned recording with the DSD-MR until my fingers hurt, but it's probably better that I move on. Passacaglia performed by the Kansas City Orchestra and recorded by Keith Johnson for Reference Recordings is an "old" favorite of mine. This piece of music encapsulates a bit of everything when it comes to lows, highs, delicacy, transients, etc... and it demonstrates the best and the "worst" of the DSD-MR. When I say worst I mean one area where the DSD-MR is better than many DACs but not as good as some of the other great DACs. If anything, perhaps I hear a trade-off or design decision that must be made because every designer has to deal with engineering compromises. It's how these are handled that's key for the consumer. It should also be noted that other great DACs may best the DSD-MR in this category, but certainly not in other categories. 

     

    Readers should also note that what I hear is an incredibly small difference. I don't beat around the bush when describing what I hear. What follows is an exact description that doesn't force any reading between the lines. It should also be noted that to date, neither Alex Peychev nor any of his customers have heard the sonic qualities I describe below. Alex was surprised to read what I wrote. Last, don't blow this out of proportion.

     

    The opening several minutes of the track sound fantastic. The string section sounds like it's sweeping around the room with a vibrancy and eeriness that grabs one's attention. In typical Reference Recordings fashion there's a raw sound to it that places the listener right in the concert hall with the symphony. As horns come and go four minutes into the track the sound is spectacular. The shimmer of cymbals can be heard, starting delicate and gaining force before handing off to the eerie strings that slink in and take over. This is all delightful in a sonic sense. As the orchestra ramps up with bombastic drums and loud cymbal crashes, the sound loses a bit of of detail. At the 5:45 mark of this track, with a 26 R128 dynamic range score, the DSD-MR shows that the transients can cause it to round the edges ever so slightly and group some instruments together. Other flagship DACs reproduce these transients better than the DSD-MR, but those DACs definitely don't sound as sweet, vibrant, and emotional as the DSD-MR. I believe this is the design trade-off I can hear. 

     

     

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    If readers haven't heard the new Norah Jones track Just A Little Bit from her forthcoming album Begin Again, I can't recommend enough that they take some time to give it a listen. I'm enamored by this track. In fact, if audiophiles wouldn't have burned out Norah's first album Come Away With Me and seared her voice into my brain, I'd like this new album even more. That's a personal issue though. 

     

    Just A Little Bit sounds spectacular through the DSD-MR. The track's deep and rhythmic bass foundation juxtaposed with Norah's smooth but cutting voice is a treat for the ears. I've listened to this album, and this track alone, several times per day since I discovered it last week. It's just so enjoyable to hear the aspects I just mentioned, but also the delicacy of the snare drum come through as pure as the driven snow. 

     

    I was inspired by this and other tracks from Begin Again to bring up Norah's previous album Day Breaks. It's a return to form for Norah Jones after stretching her creativity after the success of her debut album. A hidden gem on this album is a track named Flipside. It may not be everyone's cup of tea, but it has grown on me. Dr. Lonnie Smith's Hammond B3 can be heard throughout the track in the background and it's just such a sweet sound. Listening through the APL Hi-Fi DSD-MR enabled me to clearly pick out each element of this at times chaotic track. Even Norah's Wurlitzer is engaging and light and airy hi-hat brushing from Brian Blade is clearly audible if the listener wishes to pick up on it. 

     

    Picking up on things is something this DAC enables very well. What I mean is that the music is a whole just as the band plays it, but the DSD-MR has terrific separation of instruments and a vibrancy that brings instruments out into the room. It's as if the specific instrument one is listening for has a spotlight shone on it. I can't describe it any other way. 

     

    Quickly before moving on to the details of the DSD-MR and DNP-SR and how they work together incredibly well, I'll mention the album Moon Ray from Yoshio Otomo Quartet with Tsuyoshi Yamamoto. I have the JVC XRCD of the 1977 Three Blind Mice release. The second I pressed play on the first track I thought to myself, oh wow this is good. But when Otomo's saxophone kicked in a few seconds later I felt like I'd just received a shot of a potent painkiller. I melted in my listening chair and put my work on hold for the time being. This album and this DAC just can't be denied. 

     

     

    Details


    I hope that by now some readers get it. This DAC is special. After listening for weeks, I asked APL's Alex Peychev about the DACs architecture in an attempt to discern what makes it so special. Sure the sound is special, but I was interested in how Alex obtains this sound. After reading the first paragraph of Alex's response to me, my suspicions about his design philosophy were validated. 


    "The DSD-MR design is inspired by the sound quality of our reference Kuzma/Dynavector vinyl playback system. After many years and countless experiments, it was clear to me that DSD most closely approaches the sound of analog. We also performed similar tests using respected reel-to-reel machines to the same effect. Not that PCM cannot sound good, it does. But, managed properly, DSD produces a fatigue-free sound that is natural, smooth and effortless, just like pure analog."

     


    APL-Hi-Fi-DSD-MR-Tubes.jpgThis describes exactly 100% what I heard through the DSD-MR. This DAC is so analog, I'm willing to bet vinyl junkies could be tricked into thinking it was all analog, if it wasn't for the lack of pops and ticks. Heck, put on a vinyl rip and I'll put my money on this DAC fooling most of the people most of the time. 

     

    APL Hi-Fi obtains this sound by converting DSD to analog without altering the DSD data in any way and converting PCM to DSD128 or DSD256 (user selectable). The DSD-MR uses pure DSD filtration with linear-phase FIR filters and analog filters followed by a differential Class-A transformer-coupled tube output stage (using ECC99 tubes). The DSD-MR contains no OpAmps, discrete transistor stages, mechanical switches, coupling capacitors or negative feedback on the analog signal path. Instead, the DSD-MR uses custom audio transformers, wound with Oxygen Free Copper, made by Lundahl Transformers in Sweden. Both the analog domain DSD filter and tube output stages use those transformers.

     

     

    When the DAC receives PCM data it uses an FPGA-based PCM to DSD modulator for conversion. According to Peychev, "we have settled on two filters, both with 64 bit precision and linear phase. One is a slow rolloff and the other sharp rolloff. There is also a zero filter setting which completely eliminates the digital filters and provides the best impulse response. With this setting the DSD-MR achieves sound quality similar to non-oversampling DAC designs." I listened to the filters and settled on what's called the NORM filter for most of my listening but I really like the ZERO setting that bypasses digital filters as well. Both sounded wonderful and engaging. 


    Once the DSD-MR has the data in the DSD format, it uses Peychev's own design for digital to analog conversion. This isn't an R2R either. The actual DSD to Analog conversion is based on a linear phase FIR filter, followed by a passive filtering stage in the analog domain. I was unable to pull any additional information out of Alex about this design. I believe he wants to keep this design to himself and I don't blame him. For Alex it's all about getting as close to analog as possible and his own custom design was his way of getting there. 

     

     

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    The DSD-MR may be the heaviest DAC I've ever lifted. At 54 lbs it weighs nearly 20 lbs more than the dCS Vivaldi, and it has no volume control. The DAC has all the standard inputs such as AES, S/PDIF, TosLink and USB going to unbalanced RCA or balanced XLR outputs. What's different are the DTR inputs. According to APL, "DTR input uses proprietary encrypted DSD, as well as PCM via balanced LVDS transmission, similar to I2S." I tried all the inputs on the DSD-MR and found its DTR input to sound the best without question. I didn't want to believe it because I often think these proprietary inputs are a way of locking customers into using another component from the same manufacturer but, given the performance APL is getting from DTR, I have nothing but great things to day about it. 

     

     

     

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    This raises the question, how did I get a DTR capable signal? I used APL Hi-Fi's DNP-SR Streamer. This is a surprising product in many ways. It's the first product I know of that uses AURALiC's ARIES hardware and configuration software (if necessary). APL licensed the Auralic pieces rather than recreate the wheel and spend way more money than necessary. Very smart decision for a small company. The DNP-SR Streamer can be used as a Lightning endpoint supporting all the functionality of an Auralic Lightning device or it can be used as a Roon Ready endpoint. I used it in Roon mode for the entire review period. The DNP-SR Streamer ships from the factory in Roon mode and only requires the user plugin an Ethernet cable or connect via WiFi to start listening. 

     

     

     

    Of course APL didn't just take an ARIES and stick it in an expensive chassis. The DNP-SR is, according to Alex, "the only streamer in current existence to use absolutely 100% low-noise linear power."

     

    One more important note about the parts selection for the DSD-MR DAC, Alex is absolutely meticulous. Every part that goes into the DSD-MR is hand selected as only an audio perfectionist can do. Not only each model or version of the part, but the actual part that's placed in the DAC. To get the best sound, one has to inspect every part in a batch of parts rather than just plop them in the product. 

     

    There really isn't much to the setup or configuration of either the DNP-SR Streamer or DSD-MR DAC. They are simple devices designed to sound like analog HiFi. 

     

     

    Conclusion

     

    The APL Hi-Fi DSD-MR DAC is a unique product to say the least. It's unique in its design and sound quality. Its custom designed digital to analog conversion and FPGA PCM to DSD modulator are part of why the DSD-MR sounds the way it does. APL's Alex Peychev had a singular goal in mind when designing the DSD-MR, to get as close to analog as possible. Keeping control of everything going on inside the DAC is the only way to control everything coming out of the DAC. The sound emanating from the APL DSD-MR DAC is nothing short of stunning.  It's an amazing component that put my listening pleasure on a different level. Pure sonic enjoyment and blissful ignorance of the world around me is how to describe my mornings when I sat down with some fine tea and a favorite album or two or three. It's literally hard to stop listening when the DSD-MR is in one's system. 

     

    Feeding the DSD-MR with the APL Hi-Fi DNP-SR Streamer resulted in the best sound quality without question. Comparing this stellar sound to other DACs, I'd say it's much closer to that of dCS than Berkeley Audio Design. The APL DSD-MR isn't one of those DACs that will tear one's head off with sizzle or grate on one's ears after long periods of time. It's one of the most enjoyable DACs currently available and certainly the most memorable. It reproduces a sound I won't soon forget, much the same as I can't forget the sound of my first electrostatic loudspeakers. There's something about the APL Hi-Fi sound that's exceptional and seductive. The DSD-MR and DNP-SR combination has my highest recommendation.  

     

     

    APL Hi-FI Image Gallery
     

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    User Feedback

    Recommended Comments



    3 minutes ago, joelha said:

    Hey Marcin,

     

    I'm glad you posted because I owe you a very big public "thank you" for introducing me to Alex Peychev and APL.

     

    Spending time with you and hearing APL's components were absolutely the highlights of my visit to the Warsaw Show.

     

    Thanks again.

     

    Joel

     

    Joel, always a pleasure

     

    Marcin

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    45 minutes ago, The Computer Audiophile said:

    Thanks for the kind words and comments. Alex suggested I use DSD128 for better transients as well. It’s all about engineering trade offs. No DAC is perfect. Over all I like what DSD256 gave me more than what it may have taken away from a more perfect transient response. 

     

    All good. What a product. I feel like I’ve been driving a Ferrari for the last couple months. 

    I agree. I've done many comparisons and I always came back to DSD256 setting. 

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    9 hours ago, The Computer Audiophile said:

    Yes, my preference using the APL DAC was DSD256.

     

    There are already DACs that can do DSD512 & DSD1024 & much much cheaper.

     

    Seems having DSD256 max is incredibly outdated for a 2019 $50,000 DAC

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    7 hours ago, ThenewGearPPK said:

     

    There are already DACs that can do DSD512 & DSD1024 & much much cheaper.

     

    Seems having DSD256 max is incredibly outdated for a 2019 $50,000 DAC

    I’m not following your logic. 

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    Did someone compare the APL DSD-MR to an Aries Cerat Kassandra?

    Thanks

     

    Matt

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    On 3/29/2019 at 2:25 AM, The Computer Audiophile said:

    Thanks for the kind words and comments. Alex suggested I use DSD128 for better transients as well. It’s all about engineering trade offs. No DAC is perfect. Over all I like what DSD256 gave me more than what it may have taken away from a more perfect transient response. 

     

    All good. What a product. I feel like I’ve been driving a Ferrari for the last couple months. 

     

     

    Hello Chris,

    I don't at all doubt that it is  possibly in many ways one of the best dacs that money can buy.

     

    It'd better be, at that price!

     

    But  to me the absolutely  MOST  interesting paragraph in your review was where you mentioned how it handled the extremely  densely scored passages in  Britten's Passacaglia  from the Reference Recordings album.

    To me it indicates two things. You obviously  have a very resolving system and  you know where a link fails to deliver the whole truth. 

    As someone who listens almost exclusively not only to  acoustic music, but also

    LARGE SCALE symphonic like  Britten, Stravinsky and  Bartok to mention a couple of composers whose music is good material to "sort the wheat from the chaff",  I have to conclude that this dac was possibly designed to sound euphonic? much like vinyl and analogue tape do?

     

    But not necessarily as live music  ACTUALLY sounds?

     

    But for me the ONLY  REFERENCE POINT there can be in  REAL HI FI terms, is HOW CLOSE any link in a reproduction chain dac or whatever else can reproduce acoustic music  to how it sounds LIVE in a real hall.

     

    And  with the example you mention  to you there are already other dacs that sort out very complex symphonic music better than this dac does with this particular recording.

     

    If I am not wrong that Reference Recording is a PCM recording recorded at 176.4 with the Pacific Microsonics chip used  by Mr Jonsson for many of his recordings which would have had to be converted to DSD by this Dac.

     

    Some more recent recordings from the same label have been made at DSD 256. Do you have any of those as well to compare with other dacs?

     

    You also say that it's been like driving a Ferrari.

     

    Have you  also driven a Chord DAVE  with a Chord Hugo M Scaler yet?

     

    I suspect that with this particular recording and possibly others of the same complexity and dynamic range it might be an even  smoother and possibly more REALISTIC drive than the dac  you have just reviewed.

     

     Nota bene,I am not saying this as a fact.

    I am only guessing  from actually hearing the DAVE/HMS and using the HMS with a Qutest dac since three months on a daily basis.

     

    I have yet to audition the dac you reviewed.

     

    And the DAVE/HMS would play the  native 176.4 pcm file not a conversion of it.

     

    On the other hand the DAVE/HMS and TT2/HMS would do the opposite with a native DSD file.

    I would not rule out the possiblity that the  "Ferrari dac" is  one of the best DSD dacs around. But I guess DAVE/HMS would sound more realistic and closer to the real thing with NATIVE PCM material.

     

    If you haven't yet  heard either the TT2/HMS or DAVE /HMS yet do  try to do so while you still have the dac under discussion in your home.

    I would be very interested to hear your take on such a comparison with the MOST demanding material you have.

    Cheers Christer

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

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    On 3/29/2019 at 2:25 AM, The Computer Audiophile said:

    All good. What a product. I feel like I’ve been driving a Ferrari for the last couple months. 

     

    Which DAC would be like driving a Koenigsegg Jesko?😎

     

    Matt

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    37 minutes ago, matthias said:

     

    Which DAC would be like driving a Koenigsegg Jesko?😎

     

    Matt

     

    Those who drive Jesko would not care about DACs. To own a symphony orchestra or opera theater would be a better fit.

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    Hi

    Did you ask what was behind the decision not to have a volume control?

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    12 hours ago, AnotherSpin said:

     

    Those who drive Jesko would not care about DACs. To own a symphony orchestra or opera theater would be a better fit.

     

    Certainly, but this was not my point.

    According to Chris the DSD-MR is not perfect.

    So is there a DAC which combines the virtues of the DSD-MR and some other top DACs?

     

    Matt

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    9 hours ago, kaka said:

    Hi

    Did you ask what was behind the decision not to have a volume control?

     

    IMO, a volume control is not superior to a very good preamp.

    So you pay for things you do not need.

     

    Matt

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    6 hours ago, matthias said:

     

    Certainly, but this was not my point.

    According to Chris the DSD-MR is not perfect.

    So is there a DAC which combines the virtues of the DSD-MR and some other top DACs?

     

    Matt

    That is basically the same question I was asking and with a suggestion of a combo that might be more resolving and ultimately "better", than the "Ferrari dac".

     

    According to the designer behind that combo ie Dave/HMS, DSD is a fundamenally flawed format with limitations that can not ever be solved.

    According to him he used a format identical to today's  DSD 256  already in the 1990s but later  abandoned it  because of its too many limitations.

     

    Personally I am only interested in  maximum transparency to the source.

    I am not interested in dac solutions that  possibly only sound as good the best of  vinyl.

    I already have a good LP player.

    I want dacs that sound  clearly better and closer to real live acoustic music than even  the very best of vinyl!

     

     

     

     

     

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    3 hours ago, chrille said:

    According to the designer behind that combo ie Dave/HMS, DSD is a fundamenally flawed format with limitations that can not ever be solved.

    According to him he used a format identical to today's  DSD 256  already in the 1990s but later  abandoned it  because of its too many limitations.

     

    I know what the mentioned designer thinks about DSD but the Chord products are not my cup of tea.

    Further I would not regard DSD as a flawed format. Some excellent guys like @tailspn and @Miska are working with it.

    I appreciate what Chris said about the emotional impact of the DSD-MR.

    Maybe the mentioned issue can be solved in the next version of the DSD-MR.

     

    Matt

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    3 hours ago, matthias said:

     

    I know what the mentioned designer thinks about DSD but the Chord products are not my cup of tea.

    Further I would not regard DSD as a flawed format. Some excellent guys like @tailspn and @Miska are working with it.

    I appreciate what Chris said about the emotional impact of the DSD-MR.

    Maybe the mentioned issue can be solved in the next version of the DSD-MR.

     

    Matt

    Hello Matt,

    I am personally not stating the above as facts, I am merely and hopefully this time, correctly, quoting Rob Watts.

     

     

     

    I have quite a few DSD recordings especially from Channel Classics that I play often and like a lot.

    I also sometimes wonder why Rob finds DSD so bad?

     

    I am also aware of the fact that some companies still record in DSD64 in spite of the inevitable  noise problems involved in post processing DSD64 recordings.

     

    I personally think that DSD64 raw and unedited can sound very transparent and in some ways more listenable than some pcm which still even in hi res, sometimes suffers from  hardening and digital ringing that can be painful to hear.

     

    I sometimes prefer the slightly softer than live sound of DSD64 over hard ringing pcm.

     

    And I would absolutely love to hear the complete DSD256 recorded version of for example Mahler's 3rd which Tailspn recorded with a  very simple five mic rig in parallel with Jared Sacks DSD64 Grimm multimic take already released.

     

    In that particular case and long before I had an M Scaler it was quite clear to me that at least via my systems both headphone based and via electrostatic speakers, that both the DSD128 ,the DSD256 and DXD samples from the sessions sounded closer to how I have myself  heard that orchestra sound in that hall during the sessions for M5, than the slightly less resolved and softer but still very good DSD 64 version.

     

    My personal guess is that neither DSD 256 nor DXD are quite  enough to capture a symphony orchestra in all its glory.

     

    I suspect that maybe 32 or even 64 bits and a sampling rate of 768khz may be necessary to do it full justice.

    But I also have reasons to suspect that Mr Watts actually knows what he is talking about very well and at least since first hearing his Dave/BLU2 and now Dave/HMS and Qutest /HMS, what I keep hearing  from my best masterfiles both DSD and PCM  tend to confirm  his claims.

     

    It may unfortunately be a fact that the issue you hope can be solved in the next version of this dac is in fact an inherent nonsolvable issue of DSD as a format?

     

    One thing Rob Watts keeps mentioning as a really major problem with DSD apart from the well known and undeniable noise  issue with DSD 64 in particular, is the softening and blurring of transients.

    And to me it is an undeniable fact that music in fact is simply a series of transients.

    Cheers Chris

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

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    Awesome product with price to match; thanks for the great review. 

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    @chrille

    IMO, in 2019 DSD64 is obsolete.

    It is not an appropriate format for comparisons to high rate PCM or DSD.

    According to posts from @tailspn recordings in DSD256 seem to be superior to those in DXD.

     

    Matt

     

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    7 hours ago, chrille said:

    I suspect that maybe 32 or even 64 bits and a sampling rate of 768khz may be necessary to do it full justice.

     

    That would be comparable to DSD512 or DSD1024 and in this case I would prefer DSD.

     

    Matt

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    On 3/28/2019 at 9:16 PM, mevdinc said:

    Chris,
    Thanks for such a great review, I really enjoyed reading it. Well done.
    I wish you'd stated the price at the beginning though, so the shock would have been less perhaps. :)

    It maybe well be worth the asking price but one thing I find unacceptable is the lack of a volume control. I personally refuse to buy a DAC without a volume control and at this price level I would certainly expect one.

    Most of your description of the APL DAC sounds very similar to my Lindemann Musicbook DSD 20, which is also claimed to sound very analog like. It also upsamples everything to DSD 128 or DSD 256 with a preamp and a builtin streamer. Apparently there's an upgrade coming soon too in the form of both hardware and software.
    I was wondering you had heard the Lindemann DAC and or might be interested in checking out the upcoming version as a comparison.

    Again thanks for the great write up.
    Best.
    Mev

     

    The Lindemann Music Book series are wonderful but not comparable to the APL DSD-MR in terms of ultimate sound quality.

     

    / Marcus, www.perfect-sense.se

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    On 3/29/2019 at 5:42 AM, ThenewGearPPK said:

     

    There are already DACs that can do DSD512 & DSD1024 & much much cheaper.

     

    Seems having DSD256 max is incredibly outdated for a 2019 $50,000 DAC

     

    Extreme sampling rates might be considered a nice bonus, where sound quality will be the result of many other and more important factors.

     

    / Marcus, www.perfect-sense.se

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    15 minutes ago, Perfect sense said:

     

    The Lindemann Music Book series are wonderful but not comparable to the APL DSD-MR in terms of ultimate sound quality.

     

    / Marcus, www.perfect-sense.se

    Thanks for that.

    I was more referring to the similarity in the digital is the new analog claim rather than comparing the two, the APL is 10 times more expensive for that reason alone it should sound so much better.
    I'm looking forward to hearing the upcoming Lindemann update before I start considering a new DAC.

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    3 hours ago, Perfect sense said:

    Extreme sampling rates might be considered a nice bonus, where sound quality will be the result of many other and more important factors.

     

    / Marcus, www.perfect-sense.se

     

    Such as the DSD-MR DAC's Class A tube output stage (without volume control)? o.O

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    14 hours ago, Abtr said:

     

    Such as the DSD-MR DAC's Class A tube output stage (without volume control)? o.O

     

    There are design considerations involved here to obtain maximum sound quality basically.

     

    The technical explanation in short:

     

    The DSD-MR processes DSD in its native domain by using a balanced FIR filter, followed by analog filtering stage and balanced tube output stage. Since Lundahl transformers with OFC windings are used for the post-FIR filter analog filtration and I/V conversion, those audio transformers effectively ground the grids of the vacuum tubes in the output stage. This said, introducing a volume control will only deteriorate the audio quality of the DSD-MR. 

     

    You could debate if driving a power amp directly is superior to having a dedicate preamp in your system. Based on experience (my own and others), a well built pre amp on a similar level will most often be beneficial adding to the overall performance of the system. A higher end integrated will of course be an option as well, where there are more options available than ever.

     

    / Marcus, www.perfect-sense.se

     

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    17 hours ago, mevdinc said:

    Thanks for that.

    I was more referring to the similarity in the digital is the new analog claim rather than comparing the two, the APL is 10 times more expensive for that reason alone it should sound so much better.
    I'm looking forward to hearing the upcoming Lindemann update before I start considering a new DAC.

     

    Could you please explain what you mean by "digital is the new analog"? 

     

    / Marcus, www.perfect-sense.se

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