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    Reality Quest: Power and Digital Audio with the Sean Jacobs DC4 and Sound Application PGI TT-7 (Part 1 of 2)

     

    Reality Quest: Power and Digital Audio with the Sean Jacobs DC4 and Sound Application PGI TT-7 (Part 1 of 2)

     

     

    A hundred years ago at the start of the pandemic, I had a few words to say about the Taiko Audio SGM Extreme digital music server. 

     

    In that piece, I detailed my high level strategy and hypothesis for digital optimization:

     

    • First Law: Invest in cabling, power, and digital hygiene to do as little harm as possible (directly or indirectly) to the DAC’s clock, ground plane, or reference voltage plane
    • Second Law: Invest in a digital endpoint that moves bit perfect digital data from ethernet to a USB DAC with as little variability and as much timing and signal integrity as possible (aka, as close to precision real time data streaming to DAC as possible)

     

    The Extreme delivers on the Second Law of Digital Audio to a level way beyond anything I have ever heard, and has only improved during the last 100 pandemic years (look for a future Part 6 to my Extreme review later this Spring). 

     

    Any interesting side effect of pushing the Second Law to the Extreme (ouch) is that it has made it incredibly easy to discern the impact to sound quality from any other change in my system. With this clarity, it was finally time to revisit the First Law of Digital Audio (“Do No Harm To Thy DAC’s Clock, Ground Plane, and Reference Voltage Plane”), and see if better power could make things better.

     

    For a couple years now, I have had the very good fortune of having a custom Sean Jacobs DC3 power supply powering my Chord DAVE DAC. It completely transformed what I already considered the finest DAC I’ve ever heard, bringing a level of dynamics and control and spaciousness and reality that I had never heard outside of a live performance. Later, I added a dedicated 30A circuit with 10-2 Romex to the party and a Topaz ultra low capacitance isolation transformer, and all this awesome just got awesomer.

     

    So when I heard that Sean had released his new DC4 power supply, I reached out to see if I could arrange a loaner for review. He graciously agreed, and in doing so gave me a good excuse to revisit the First Law in my system, and see what new truths were waiting to be found. 

     

    For good measure, since I was already breaking the seal on the First Law, it was long past time to put aside my well-practiced denial about power line conditioning and give the Sound Application TT-7 power line conditioner a proper listen. For many years, many trusted ears had urged me to audition Jim Weil’s Sound Application PLCs, but with the universal warning to not do so unless I was ready to purchase one. I resisted, mainly so I could get the rest of my system dialed in first. With the Second Law well in hand, it was time to set aside my denial and give the PGI TT-7 a proper listen. 

     

    Spoiler warning: all those that urged me not to listen to one unless I was ready to purchase one were absolutely right (wow!).

     


    Background on Power and Digital Systems


    First my usual caveat: Digital optimizations and hygiene in audio can be a contentious topic (bits are bits, right?). Rather than debate mechanics, I am sharing my experiences in my home with my equipment and my local power grid with my ears and my biases and my aspirations for connecting emotionally to remarkable musical performances. Almost certainly yours will vary. Hopefully my experiences are helpful to you, but if not, that’s OK too.

     

    As I noted in my Extreme review, any time I have inserted a better/faster DC power supply (Paul Hynes SR4, Uptone Audio UltraCap LPS-1.2, LDOVR DXP supplies, etc) that delivers well-regulated voltage under very dynamic current loads, sound quality has improved. Similarly, better conductors and better shielding consistently improves sound quality, as does reducing mechanical vibrations on power supplies and digital components.

     

    So what is a possible basis for this? Digital systems are inherently switching systems, with current being switched on and off potentially billions of times a second. Like a light switch, every switch causes a surge in current, which then gets turned off when the switch turns off. The job of the power supply is to keep a perfect reference voltage (“On”) and perfect reference ground (“Off”). In the real world, no power supply is perfect, and it lags in how quickly it can respond to changing current demands. That lag can impact the reference voltage and the ground plane. In a DAC, that can be particularly bad, since the digital to analog section can be impacted by this noise, making it audible.

     

    DAC designers go to great lengths to filter or isolate this induced noise, but there are practical limits based on cost targets, availability of components, size/heat, etc. However, if there were no pragmatic restrictions, the ideal power supply would have perfect voltage regulation, be infinitely fast with an infinite reserve of instantaneous current, a perfect ground, and wiring that has zero impedance (resistance, capacitance, and inductance).

     

    In practice, nothing has zero impedance or unlimited instantaneous current capacity, so choices must be made, and accommodations made elsewhere in the design for the pragmatic realities of any given power supply.

     

    For example, the stock Chord DAVE DAC (>$10,000, so no slouch on the available budget for power supplies) uses the XP Power ECM40UT33 (~$40 part) for its internal power supply. I’ve read reports that more recent DAVEs use the EOS Power LFWLT40-3002 (a ~$18 part). 

     

    Of course, that is only part of the picture.The power supply is only part of the power network for the DAVE, with gobs of filtering and voltage regulation engineered into the DAC itself. Since we can’t (easily) hack the DAC printed circuit board to tweak power, what can we do to improve the key areas where power makes a big difference to a DAC?

     

    John Swenson, designer of first-class products for Uptone Audio and Sonore among others, has written extensively about power supplies and their impact on digital audio. His main areas of focus have been leakage current, and output impedance. 

     

    For leakage current, John has focused our attention on high impedance leakage current (an issue with switching power supplies, like the SMPS in the Chord DAVE), and low impedance leakage current, which impacts both switching supplies and linear power supplies. John argues that leakage current can cause voltage variations across the ground plane, causing jitter.

     

    For output impedance, John has focused on output impedance as a function of frequency. The lower the output impedance, the better a power supply can deliver a stable voltage at different current levels.

     

    There are more subtle characteristics as well. In an extremely informative post, Rob Watts (designer of the Chord DAVE, and decidedly not an advocate for power optimization for his designs) outlined the key areas of consideration for power when designing a DAC. This is a master class, and a roadmap to power optimization for DACs, which because of its importance and relevance, I am quoting in full here:

     


    RF noise. This by far is the most important thing in a PSU and analog electronics; it's something I talk about a great deal. The problem is that analogue audio components are non-linear, and very non-linear at RF (and by that I actually mean 20 kHz to several GHz). When a random RF noise gets into active audio components, it distorts with the wanted audio signal and creates inter-modulation distortion - and some of the inter-modulation distortion has an audio component - audible random noise. What happens with this is when there is no audio signal, you get no inter-modulation distortion, hence no extra noise. When the audio signal increases, the inter-modulation products increases, and noise goes up - so noise levels becomes linked to the signal level and you get noise floor modulation. Now this issue is easy to measure, and taking steps to remove RF noise lowers noise floor modulation. Additionally, you can improve the analogue electronics open loop RF linearity too.



     

    The problem with noise floor modulation is the ear/brain is extremely sensitive to it, and certainly can detect levels of noise floor modulation that is below the ability to measure. My own tentative conclusions (or rule of thumb) are that one can hear levels of noise floor modulation down to -200dB - currently we can measure noise floor modulation at -180 dB, and Dave has zero measured noise floor modulation. In terms of SQ, if noise floor modulation is say around -120 dB (typical class D) you get considerable hardness and glare; at -140 dB its grain in the treble; below -160 dB then things sound much smoother with better instrument separation and focus. This continues until about -200dB (and perhaps even lower - reducing RF noise is not something that has an acceptable limit).



     

    But to get this level of performance required me to do many things; and part of that was the PSU system. I call it a system because it is lots of parts working together, with sources of noise within the DAC contaminating other parts. One source is the mains power, so this is dealt with a filter that starts at a few 100 Hz to several GHz - each PSU line (+15v,-15v,+5v) from the SMPS is individually filtered with a complex multistage filter. That covers RF noise initially, but every analogue part is individually regulated and RF filtered again. Moreover, each digital module is individually RF filtered too, as each digital part of a DAC is a huge RF noise generator.
     
    PSU impedance. The impedance of the power supply is crucial too as it can create distortion which is audible. The actual mechanism for distortion from an amplifier is due to the fact that an amp draws signal related current from the PSU; this current then creates a voltage drop in the power rails (an error) that is signal dependent; this error then is fed back to the amplifiers output by the amp power supply rejection ration (PSRR); the error then creates distortion in the output. For Class A it is second harmonic, for class B it is very serious HF harmonics extending to infinite harmonics. Now its very easy to design the amp to avoid this problem; simply use low enough output impedance PSU and an amp that has a large enough PSRR. It is easy to calculate your requirements; much more difficult to design a stage that meets those requirements. So with Dave I wanted no measurable effect from this; this meant a PSU impedance in the OP stage of 3 milli ohms, which would make this effect un-measurable at -180dB. And that's exactly what I achieve; loading the output stage shows no measurable PSU induced distortion at all.

     

    Reference supply. So far I have talked about the requirements for the analogue section; and this is an interaction between amp topology (sensitivity to RF and PSRR) against the actual levels within the PSU. So you could use a poor PSU with an amp that had amazing RF and PSRR or vice versa. My approach with Dave is to use both strategies - get the best innate isolation with the best filtering I could do. But there is a PSU where whatever happens on the PSU will be directly on the output and this is the reference PSU. Now nobody talks about the reference for two reasons - it is buried inside a DAC chip, and because people are not aware of how crucial this component is. The reference supplies the voltage that is used to create the analogue voltage (or current) output on the DAC, so clearly if that voltage changes it will have an immediate and 100% impact on the output. Normally, with a silicon DAC the reference presents a problem; noise on the reference will appear on the output, so making the SNR and dynamic range (DR) depend on the reference. Its actually extremely difficult to have a 120dB reference voltage on chip; so to overcome this they use a differential structure (balanced + and -). This means the reference noise, when its reproducing small signals is cancelled as it becomes common mode. So you get good DR figures from a poor reference. But when the signal becomes larger, the cancellation stops and you then see the reference noise and you get noise floor modulation - which is very measurable and very audible. It's one reason why chip based DAC's have large amounts of noise floor modulation.
     

     

     

    Rob clearly has made a HUGE investment in his designs to minimize any adverse impact from power issues. If he believes that the stock DAVE medical grade power supply delivers the best performance and further investment in power supply won’t have a material impact, who are any of us to say otherwise? 

     

    While there is literally no one in digital audio that I respect more than Rob Watts, on this my ears respectfully disagree. When provided with better and better power, the Chord DAVE scales beautifully (incredibly actually), and reveals a quality of dynamics and sense of space and relaxed naturalness that is otherworldly and must be heard to be believed. Both the Sean Jacobs DC4 and Sound Application PGI TT-7 not only have a place at this table, but are essential foundational elements to build around.

     


    BEWARE!! Here Dragons Dwell…


    Before going further, a reminder that what is described here is most definitely not supported nor endorsed by Chord or any DAC manufacturer. It involves opening the case (a no no) and replacing the power supply to the unit (a big no no). 

     

    Before attempting anything like this, please appreciate that you are likely voiding warranties, putting your equipment at risk, and potentially putting yourself at risk. If you are not comfortable doing so, or if you have ANY doubts about your skills and ability to work safely with electronic circuits and live power, please do not attempt any of these modifications to your system. 

     

    To very intentionally belabor the point, anything you choose to do is at your own risk. If you have doubts about whether you should attempt any of this, please do not attempt it!!! Frying your equipment or yourself simply isn’t worth it.

     


    Enter the Sean Jacobs DC4


    Note that the DC4 supplies can be spec’ed and leveraged in a variety of scenarios, not just to power the Chord DAVE (for example, Sean does offer a variant tailored to the Chord Blu2 transport, and Sean has been designing and building power supplies for Naim and Innuos and others for years). Depending on the voltages and number of voltage rails you require, each build is unique. 

     

    When I first approached Sean for a loaner DC4 to review, he suggested that given his workload and backlog, I work with @Nenon here in the US, who is licensed to build supplies based on Sean’s designs for the US market. For the purpose of this review, I requested a custom 3 rail DC4 with 5V, +15V, and -15V as required by the Chord DAVE, which @Nenon graciously agreed to build and provide for review.

     

    (Disclosure: I have no financial affiliation with Sean Jacobs, @Nenon, or anyone mentioned in this review other than as a customer who has purchased their products. Moreover, I have no commercial interest or affiliation in any of the vendors discussed in this review. Review units were provided without condition or expectation. My thanks to Sean and @Nenon for the opportunity to hear the DC4 in my system, and Jim Weil for the opportunity to hear the PGI TT-7 in my system.)

     

     

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    All Shiny and Chrome

     

    Physically, the DC4 (on the right) is considerably larger and heavier than my Sean Jacobs DC3 (on the left), but thankfully quite easy to move around. The Modushop case is upgraded from the DC3, with IsoAcoustics Gaia feet for vibration isolation and a Furutech gold plated IEC inlet.

     

     

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    Cracking the case, the build is gorgeous. From right to left, there is a custom wound 600VA transformer fully loaded with internal shielding and a stainless steel shell. The DC4 transformer is a better-spec version of the transformer used in the DC3, with a laboratory measured and selected core, precision wound windings for low mechanical noise, and the entire assembly has been potted in epoxy and a stainless steel outer can for mechanical isolation and shielding. For further mechanical isolation, the transformer assembly is mounted to the inner chassis via four vibration isolation mountings.

     

     

     

     

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    The transformer assembly is connected to three independent rectification and capacitor array (RECAP) boards, each with an updated design versus the previous generation DC3. In addition to higher grade components on the board and a gold plated printed circuit board, the DC4 RECAP boards sport four 10,000 µF Mundorf capacitors (versus two Mundorfs on the DC3) and improved filtering for each of the three voltage rails. 

     

     

     

     

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    The DC4 also includes three of Sean’s new CX voltage regulator boards (CX-REG), configured to 5V and ±15V (each rated to 5A continuous output). The regulator boards also sport gold plated PCBs and upgraded components compared to the DC3 (Vishay Z-foil resistors, Audio Note KAISEI capacitors, etc), an optimized circuit layout and star-ground management (vs the DC3), all resulting in reduced output noise and ground noise, with enhanced performance versus the DC3 design. 

     

     

     

     

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    Note that the CX boards in the DC4 have new built in circuitry to significantly improve noise rejection at low currents (up to 3A). The lower the current, the more effective the CX filter is. Interestingly, the CX filter can be enabled and disabled with a jumper on the regulator boards (it is enabled by default for DAVE configured units).

     

    With the Chord DAVE typically drawing ~1A on each of the ±15V rails and ~2A on the 5V rails, the CX filter should have a noticeable impact (more on this later).

     

     

     

     

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    All components are mounted to the case using vibration isolation materials, and the case is lined with vibration dampening materials on all sides (for these types of supplies, the transformer and large caps are particularly susceptible to vibration). All internal wiring is typically Neotech 7N OCC wiring with teflon insulation, although this particular review unit had been upgraded to use optional Mundorf silver/gold internal wiring.

     

     

     

     

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    On the output side, there is one connector for 5V and ground, and a second connector for ±15V and ground. This unit came with Sean’s standard Neotech 7N OCC DC umbilical, which combines the DC lines into a single Molex connector to be attached to the DAVE PCB. 

     

     

     

     

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    The umbilical contains clamping hardware for mounting to the DAVE case, with the 4 pin Molex connector mounting directly to the power connector on the DAVE PCB (the white connector in the photo above).

     

     

    The Sean Jacobs DC3

     

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    In comparison, the build of my circa early 2018 Sean Jacobs custom three rail DC3 supply is a bit more compact. This DC3 was configured with high current CHC-REG voltage regulator modules, so it is also capable of supplying 5A continuous current on each of the three ±15V and 5V rails (at least for short stretches).

     

    While this unit has a single output connector, the ±15V rails and 5V rails are separate from each other, and only join together at the 4 pin Molex connector that connects to the DAVE PCB (same as the DC4 cable). The DC4’s configuration is more robust with two output connectors, keeping the lines for the digital side (5V) and the analog side (±15V) separate until the connection on the DAVE PCB.

     

    Like the DC4, the DC3 uses a custom toroidal transformer with ESS (shielding between primary and secondary windings) and GOSS band (mu-metal wrap around the transformer to shield against emissions), but is of an older design than the transformer in the DC4. Unlike the DC4, the DC3 transformer does not have epoxy potting or the stainless steel can (for mechanical vibration control and shielding).

     

    Each of the three Schottky rectifier bridges in my DC3 feed two large 10,000 µF Mundorf capacitors (versus four Mundorfs in the DC4), which in turn feed three Sean Jacobs CHC-REG regulator modules. Two of these regulator modules are connected in series to give the ±15V rails and the third one is the 5V rail. 

     

    The smaller Modushop case is solid, but lacks the vibration isolation details found in the DC4 case. The umbilical with my DC3 is made from OFC (vs the Neotech OCC with the DC4).

     

    While the DC3 is a world class audio power supply, with the DC4 Sean looked to design the ultimate “cost no object” supply, elevating component, design, and build quality at every level. 

     

    Alas, the DC4 does come with a requisite ~3x increase in cost: US$7,300 as reviewed (with pricing in flux because of Brexit), versus what was at the time ~US$2,500 for the DC3 (DC3 for DAVE is now discontinued). 

     

    Compared with the DC3, the DC4 has improved circuit designs (for noise and performance), and significantly higher-spec parts to maximize performance. The assembly itself has also been optimized, with a significant pervasive focus on vibration isolation (including the premium IsoAcoustic Gaia footers), and premium connectors and internal wiring.

     

    As someone who had purchased a DC3’s to power a Chord DAVE back when this was more of a science project than a product, I was very excited to hear what Sean had come up with in his latest generation design.

     


    Installation (CAUTION!)


    For both the DC4 and DC3, installing them involves opening the Chord DAVE, and removing the stock switching power supply (please DO NOT ATTEMPT THIS unless you’re willing to void your warranty and assume all responsibility for any damage done to your system or yourself). 

     

    If you’re willing to void your warranty but do not want to install yourself, check with whomever is building your supply for you to see if they are willing to install the power cable for you.

     

     

     

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    The process to install the DC4 (and before that, the DC3) was straight forward, taking me about 20 minutes the first time, and less than 10 minutes subsequent times once I got to know where all the pieces are. More importantly for me, it is completely reversible.

     

     

     

     

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    To open the DAVE case, unplug the system and remove all the screws around the display, then move the faceplate and ring. This will reveal 4 additional screws. Only remove the bottom screw, DO NOT remove the top three screws (this mount the display to the top plate of the case).

     

    Next remove all the screws around the top left and top right of the case. This will free the top of the case from the bottom of the case, allowing you to remove the top.

     

     

     

     

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    To remove the top, gently lift the top (careful not to drop it, it is heavy!) to reveal a ribbon cable connecting the controls on the top of the DAVE to the main PCB of the DAC. Carefully disconnect the cable from the top, then fully remove the top from the unit and set aside.

     

     

     

     

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    Internally, the DAVE stock SMPS is mounted in the front left of the case (already removed in this photo). After confirming that power has been disconnected from the system, make a note of how the white 4 pin Molex on the far left of the PCB is connected (take photos!). The Molex is not keyed, so it is possible to plug in backwards and fry your DAVE. 

     

    Once you have the orientation of the Molex captured, carefully remove it from the PCB. Next, slide up to remove the power switch/inlet assembly from the back panel of the case (there is nothing holding it in place). Finally, carefully remove the 4 screws holding the SMPS in place, and remove the entire stock DAVE SMPS assembly.

     

     

     

     

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    To install the DC4 (or DC3), confirm that the DC4/DC3 is unplugged, mount the DC umbilical in the rear left of the case, and carefully connect the Molex connector to the DAVE PCB. 

     

    CAUTION!!!! The Molex connector is not keyed. It is possible to put in backwards (or displaced by one pin) and fry your DAVE PCB. Be very careful to note the proper orientation when you disconnect your stock DAVE SMPS, and double and triple check that you have the orientation right when you plug the Molex back in.

     

     

     

     

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    Once all is hooked up, carefully reconnect the ribbon cable to the top of the case, rest it securely to the side, and fire up the supply. If all goes well, DAVE will boot as usual. If not, immediately power down and figure out what went wrong. When you’re good, power off and unplug the supply, and put the top back on.

     


    Listening Impressions


    Time to put these supplies through their paces and see how they stack up. Like all components with these large Mundorf capacitors, it takes a LONG time for them to properly settle in, and the DC4 is no exception (I had very similar experience with my DC3 and my Taiko Audio SGM Extreme). That being said, you can’t have something like the DC4 in the house and not give it a listen right away!

     


    First Impressions – DC4 straight out of the box


    As I mentioned earlier, I have been using a DC3 with my DAVE for almost three years, so my first impression listening to the DC4 straight out of the box is compared against a well burned in DC3.

     

    Even without burn in (the Mundorf caps need a LOT of time to settle), the DC4 was clearly a step up from the DC3. Within the first 5 seconds of listening, I heard the characteristic bump in all the attributes that made the DC3 such a winner for me: control and viscerality of bass, the presence of the space, and a surprising increase in “relaxed naturalness” (something I’ve come to associate with a lower noise floor and better control). 

     

    One area I was expecting more (given my DC3 experience) was an increase in dynamics and detail, but my initial impression was that the fresh-out-of-the-box DC4 was being held back a bit. There was also a sense of some sound stage instability, but significantly less (based on my notes) than similar impressions I had when I first plugged in my DC3. 

     

    With my DC3, these dynamics and instability nits completely went away after running the unit for a month or so, so I had full confidence the DC4 would do the same (which it did, and then some). 

     

    Looking back to when I received my DC3, the improvement from DC3 (new) to DC3 (run in) was MASSIVE. Listening to a fresh out of the box DC4, if this is the performance I’m hearing before any burn in, I can’t wait to hear how much things improve as the supply settles in. Be patient with these caps, and your patience will be rewarded!

     

    True to form, after playing music through the DC4 + DAVE to Abyss headphones continuously for ~6 weeks (at least when I wasn’t listening to music) it VERY nicely settled in. All sense of instability was gone after ~1 week, and dynamics and clarity rapidly improved and just kept improving before settling out after ~6 weeks.

     

    With the DC4 well burned in after 6 weeks of 7/24 operation, it was finally time to pivot to critical listening.

     


    Stock DAVE SMPS versus Sean Jacobs DC3


    To reestablish a common baseline, I reinstalled my stock DAVE SMPS, plugged into a normal shared house electrical outlet with a stock computer power cord, and listened to music for several days. While the loss of viscerality and physicality of bass, resolution, and dynamics was immediate (and missed), I wanted to have this common baseline to incrementally step up the ladder and evaluate the incremental impact for each incremental change to my system.

     

    It had been almost three years since I had the stock DAVE SMPS in my system, so hearing the stock presentation did evoke no small bit of nostalgia (amazing how music and smells can sometimes take you to another time and place). After a couple days of holiday albums and favorites playing in the background, I had reestablished a baseline of my system with stock power and stock SMPS for the DAVE, so I was ready for some critical listening.

     

    Going through my standard test tracks with the stock DAVE SMPS and standard wall power, I was struck first by how different tracks presented so differently. The best recordings presented a good sense of space and physicality (that “realness” which is the experience I find so intoxicating) but still hinting at what is possible. Most recordings sounded good, but lacked that sense of depth and the sense of the space the recording was made in. Attack and dynamics were also muted, and the viscerality and extension of bass was noticeably (mostly) absent. From a resolution and detail perspective, things were not what I was (now) used to.

     

    Make no mistake, the stock DAVE was a life changing experience for me, and started me down this Reality Quest. Out of the box, it was the best I ever heard (by far) and still is, but very clearly the stock SMPS is significantly holding back the speed and dynamics and control that the DAVE is inherently capable of. Alas, once you hear what it is capable of, it is difficult to go back.

     

    So with the stock power and stock DAVE SMPS baseline established, time to swap in the Sean Jacobs DC3 (also plugged into the same generic wall outlet with the same generic power cord), and see what the DC3 brings to the party.

     

    After several days with the stock DAVE SMPS, the DC3 was a very welcome return to the characteristics I’ve learned to love of DAVE with an upgraded power supply: MUCH better/faster dynamics, significantly improved resolution and clarity and control, a viscerality and detail and presence in bass that is very engaging, lower stress and a more relaxed presentation, and an incredible sense of space.

     

    With the DC3, although volume remains the same, attack and grip on transients are just stronger and more dynamic. If you’ve had the experience of listening to a recording with poor dynamic range, then a recording with strong dynamic range, with the DC3 tracks sound like they are getting the qualitative equivalent of +4-5 dynamic range boost. Obviously the recordings themselves have not changed and the dynamic range is still the same, but the speed and control of the dynamics feel like they are much sharper and more controlled. Poor recordings become very good recordings, and good recordings become great recordings.

     

    Of particular note is the control in the bass range and the high treble. What was boomy and indistinct before becomes visceral and the detail in the bass becomes palpable. You can feel and hear the strings on the bass vibrate, and sense the resonances in the sound board, all with an incredible sense of effortless control. At the high end of the tonal range, recordings that were hot or border line harsh before now have a clarity and openness and naturalness that wasn’t there before. 

     

    The DC3 supply is simply able to drive and keep control of the output much better, while having much faster dynamics and more precise transients. In addition, all that wonderful sense of space and timing accuracy that DAVE is famous for gets taken to the next level with the DC3.

     

    Simply put, if you have a Chord DAVE, you haven’t heard what it is really capable of until you’ve heard it with an upgraded supply like the DC3 – a world class power supply reveals the DAVE for the world class DAC that it is.

     


    Sean Jacobs DC3 versus Sean Jacobs DC4


    When I first installed my DC3 several years ago, it was the most significant upgrade I had ever introduced to my system (even more impactful than adding mScaler to my DAVE). Prior to the DC3, I used to think that it was certain recordings that were holding back DAVE from what it was capable of. After hearing the DC3, I thankfully learned that it was the SMPS in DAVE that was holding back DAVE, and that better power revealed an amazing magic that had been waiting in the recordings all along. It was that experience that set me down the path of optimizing my digital server to maximize dynamics and transient performance and minimize noise (ending up with the Taiko Audio SGM Extreme), and now back to revisit power to my DAC.

     

    With the Sean Jacobs DC4 now fully broken in (those Mundorf caps take forever to settle in!), is there more magic in the DAVE that an upgraded power supply can reveal? Switching to the DC4 (also plugged into the same generic wall outlet with the same generic power cord), it was time to find out.

     

    Right out of the gate, it was obvious that DC4 was taking all the goodness of the DC3 and kicking up several notches: faster and more controlled dynamics (to put it mildly), breathtaking resolution and clarity and control, a true physicality and presence in the bass, and (most importantly for me) a remarkable holographic sense of space that spreads from behind the speakers to next to me on my sofa, and even above me. If DC3 makes instruments real and physically present, DC4 brings the performance into the room and up next to you, creating a hologram of the space of the performance that must be experienced to believe.

     

    I typically listen to small ensemble works, looking for that jazz club or coffee house live music experience. With the DC4, complex orchestral works are now a completely different experience. The sense of being in the hall (or at the conductor's podium, depending on the recording) is absolutely intoxicating. The resolution and dynamics almost allow you to pick out individual performers (like you can in a live performance)...so close but even this small taste gives a sense of intimacy and participation in the performance that is incredibly moving and intoxicating.

     

    With the DC4, this is a fundamentally different experience of music than I’ve enjoyed before, and hints that there may be even more that the Chord DAVE is capable of finding in these recordings. While I wait (and wait and wait and wait) patiently for my Paul Hynes custom three dual-regulated-rail SR7 to get to the front of Paul’s build queue, are there other things I can do to reveal all that DAVE is capable of doing? 

     

    Incredibly, yes there is. In Part 2 of this review, I will share my experiences with the Sound Application Power Grid Interface TT-7 power line conditioner.

     

     

    - Ray

     

     

     

     

    Part Two:

     

     

     




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    Congratulations @happybob!  Within a week or two, you'll be hearing what the DC4 can really do (although it will go through a roller coaster getting there).

     

    Very much looking forward to hearing your impressions with headphones direct.  I neglected to do those listening tests when the DC4 was here, so it will be interesting to if/how the DC4 helps with the headphone output for demanding cans like the Abyss's

     

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    Thanks RayDude, I'm really enjoying the DC4 power supply and I'm only 2 days into the breakin! One of the most amazing things I'm finding (besides just general better sound in all respects) is how much more I'm enjoying large scale classical music. With the stock Dave SMPS it just always felt wrong to me - not enough energy being transferred. But now with the LPS I'm getting a sense of what a symphony really sounds like. I've attended quite few over the years and have played (trumpet) and sang (choir) in many so I have a visceral sense/memory of what the sound is and it's amazing when it happens right. That's one thing I find with my Abyss headphones - that they essentially put me "inside" the orchestra or perhaps row 5 center (my favorite position), where speakers often put me a bit further back in the hall - still nice, but I really like the "in the music" perspective. Once all is broken in, I'll report back more and also about the Abyss-direct from Dave vs via the Formula S. I'm curious, what Headphone amp do you use? 

    On another somewhat related issue, I see many posts from folks about great music and I'm wondering if you with the Dave and your great setup - do you prefer DXD or DSD (either direct from the download or SACD or converted to DXD or DSD with the beta software you're using. My experiences with DXD (352K) vs DSD128 is that I slightly prefer the DXD via the Dave, although I expect I'd see different results if I had a different DAC that's more focused towards DSD vs Dave's focus on PCM. Thank for your insights!

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    In general, Chord DACs do better with PCM content.  The more upsampling you do (mScaler or HQP sinc filters), the better PCM performs.

     

    That being said, each release is mastered through a different pipeline, and any digital processing will impact what you're hearing through DAVE.  As a rule of thumb, I try to purchase music as close to the original mastering format as possible (98 times out of 100, that is PCM).  

     

    Alas, with SACDs, some SACDs have different masterings on the SACD DSD layer than the redbook layer.  It makes it that much harder to compare DSD64 vs redbook PCM.  The quality of DSD to PCM conversion REALLY varies based on the modulators and algorithms used, so very very hard to do a true apples to apples comparison.

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    Good to know your experience on this Ray-Dude, thanks!

     

    And yes the potential of different mastered versions of the same basic recording is always an important factor. I'm wondering if at some point, "regular" (16/44K) recordings (which of course is most of the music out there digitally) might be sonically almost equivalent to a true HD recording? (assuming same original master for the basic recording). We know that a 16/44K recording can't have the 24 bits or beyond ~20KHz information content, but I'm not sure that's of primary relevance compared to the correct D/A reconstruction of the information, of which the upsampling (either in the DAC or separately) is of prime importance. Your beta SW is I'm sure giving you a good sense of this! 

     

    And I can't remember if you've mentioned this before, what headphone amp do you use with your Abyss headphones, or do you go straight from Dave?

     

    And completely off topic, but still related to things excellent and since wine experiences are often mentioned here I thought you might appreciate, it's my favorite Barbaresco - and it's one that not many folks are familiar with: Roagna Crichet Paje. I find it to be better than even the Bruno Giacosa red label Barbarescos... It's quite spendy although I was lucky enough to get this for $80 per bottle years ago - unfortunately that's sadly all gone now. This one needs lots of aging before it's drinkable but then turns into magic when it is. Also there's a normal Roagna Paje that's much more affordable and still really good!  https://www.wine-searcher.com/find/roagna+crichet+paje+docg+barbaresco+piemonte+italy

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    I'm 99.9% 2 channel listening these days (at home, no office), but I have a Hugo TT2 for the Abyss headphones (DAVE is not quite manly enough for those cans)

     

    In the upsampling experiments I've been doing, there is a definite and tangible benefit to reconstructing signal from redbook sources (Chord DACs do this natively, but one can go well beyond what Chord DACs and even mScaler can do with SW upsampling).  The main benefit is in the time domain.  We don't hear 705kHz steady state frequencies, but we do hear timing cues at a time resolution that is enhanced at those frequencies.

     

    If DAVE were able to support 32fs, I'd definitely be upsampling to 32fs (vs 16fs).  I don't think we're close to topping out on time resolution yet.

     

    That being said, upsampling 44/16 content to 16fs vs upsampling 192/24 content to 16fs, I generally give the nod to the 192/24 starting point.  Mathematically, they should be very very close.  I suspect the difference is damage done when the 44/16 content was decimated from a higher resolution master.  If I start with 192/24, decimate to 44/16, then upsample, the differences are very very small.

     

    As always, get content in the format that is as close to the original mastering format as possible.  

     

    I defer to @The Computer Audiophile on whether we should have a audiophile wine topic in addition to an audiophile tea topic, but can't wait until we all can have proper listening/tasting sessions again (it's been a long year)

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    11 minutes ago, ray-dude said:

    I defer to @The Computer Audiophile on whether we should have a audiophile wine topic in addition to an audiophile tea topic, but can't wait until we all can have proper listening/tasting sessions again (it's been a long year)

    Not a problem. If it increases one's level of enjoyment in this hobby, I'm all for it. 

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    12 hours ago, happybob said:

     

    And yes the potential of different mastered versions of the same basic recording is always an important factor. I'm wondering if at some point, "regular" (16/44K) recordings (which of course is most of the music out there digitally) might be sonically almost equivalent to a true HD recording? (assuming same original master for the basic recording). We know that a 16/44K recording can't have the 24 bits or beyond ~20KHz information content, but I'm not sure that's of primary relevance compared to the correct D/A reconstruction of the information, of which the upsampling (either in the DAC or separately) is of prime importance. Your beta SW is I'm sure giving you a good sense of this! 

     

     

    I have yet to come across anything which makes me the slightest bit interested in any format beyond Redbook - all the music information that matters exists on a CD, say, already; it's just a matter of refining the playback chain, however you wish to do this, so that this can all be clearly heard.

     

    So much nonsense is said about the intrinsic merit of hi-res - I fail to be convinced about any aspect of these formats ... apart from making life easier for the circuitry which processes the data into analogue.

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    5 hours ago, ray-dude said:

    I'm 99.9% 2 channel listening these days (at home, no office), but I have a Hugo TT2 for the Abyss headphones (DAVE is not quite manly enough for those cans)

     

    In the upsampling experiments I've been doing, there is a definite and tangible benefit to reconstructing signal from redbook sources (Chord DACs do this natively, but one can go well beyond what Chord DACs and even mScaler can do with SW upsampling).  The main benefit is in the time domain.  We don't hear 705kHz steady state frequencies, but we do hear timing cues at a time resolution that is enhanced at those frequencies.

     

    If DAVE were able to support 32fs, I'd definitely be upsampling to 32fs (vs 16fs).  I don't think we're close to topping out on time resolution yet.

     

    That being said, upsampling 44/16 content to 16fs vs upsampling 192/24 content to 16fs, I generally give the nod to the 192/24 starting point.  Mathematically, they should be very very close.  I suspect the difference is damage done when the 44/16 content was decimated from a higher resolution master.  If I start with 192/24, decimate to 44/16, then upsample, the differences are very very small.

     

    I continue to be amazed at how much the MScaler improves the sense of space, especially in the bass. Like when I step into a large hall or when I hear really deep bass sounds, there's a sense of the size of the room that seems like it wouldn't be related to timing issues and upsampling, but it is! ... Perhaps Rob Watts follows through on the 16Mtap MScaler he's working on - not as good as the beta SW you use, but still better than the current MScaler.

     

    As to headphone amps, I am also considering the RAAL SR-1a headphones that Chris likes so much and am hoping to find a headphone amp that can drive the RAALs (limited options other than regular speaker amps through a converter box to handle their super low impedance of 0.18 ohms of the RAALs) and also the Abyss (lots of options) with the same amp.   

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    15 minutes ago, fas42 said:

    I have yet to come across anything which makes me the slightest bit interested in any format beyond Redbook - all the music information that matters exists on a CD, say, already; it's just a matter of refining the playback chain, however you wish to do this, so that this can all be clearly heard.

    In a sense, with the right DAC (including how the DAC internally does upsampling or perhaps this can be done before the content is sent to the DAC), what you say may become increasingly true as DACs (and upsampling SW) get better and better. But until such time, and even if that does happen, I definitely hear a difference in playback of really good recordings natively done at 24/352K (upsampled to 24/705K) compared to the exact same recording played at 16/44K.  (using a Chord Dave with MScaler). But I will easily say that a great recording at 16/44K will trounce a less-than-great recording in any HD format. The basic recording/mastering is the much larger variable IME.

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