Best Music Streamer to pair with Rogue Audio monoblocks and Pre-Amp


hi all,

I'm purchasing Maggies 3.7i to pair with Rogue Audio monoblocks and Pre-Amp (RP-5v2) and want to upgrade on my Bluesound Node.  Am considering the Hifi Rose RS250A, the Audiolab 9000N, and the Moon 280D.  

Any thoughts on a good pairing.

And I'm also thinking about adding 2 JL Audio subs, perhaps the E110.

I appreciate the collective wisdom of the community.

jazz99

If it’s me I’d get the Innuos Pulse streamer for its performance and outstanding Sense app and a pair of Rhythmik F12G subs that you can get for a little over the price of just one e110 and that have 12” drivers and much higher performance capabilities. Just my $0.02 FWIW, and best of luck.

Agree on that being one of the  best streamers for the money.   Buy a streamer from a company that only does streaming that has great software and support.  Vitally important in this product segment.

I have a Node 2i USB connected to a Schiit Audio Bifrost 2/64, Schiit Tyrs, and Magnepan 3.7i. I cross over at 80hz between the Magnepans and a Rhythmik F12SE. It sounds magical. 

I had the HiFi Rose RS250A for a bit.  It software was glitchy, the Tidal app started playing tracks at the wrong bit rate and everything sounded like Alvin and the Chipmunks.  Qobuz was fine as was playing from the internal drive.  It sounded very good with a deep wide soundstage and excellent imaging.  I couldn’t get past the software issue though so I sent it back, too much money for something that didn’t work well out of the box. That was over a year ago and I’ve not heard of anyone else having that issue with it though or issues in general.  

I have an SGC ST hosting a Roon core, A Bryston BDP pi as the endpoint ,Rogue RP-1 with Mullards as the pre.  I have heard many others say the Bryston BDP-3 functions wells as a Roon endpoint.    My little BDP-1 has been rock solid for several years as an endpoint.   I also like the sound. 

It has been wisely said that choosing a streamer as as much about choosing software as hardware. many people think Roon is the best software interface for playback and search and offers other features like DSP, Control and sharing between multiple devices, and of course, a rich treasure trove of metadata, containing information about the music, the artists, and the connections between them. They Sell servers and if I was starting from scratch, I think I would be tempted to get one of their servers if I was drawn to their software. 

Another👍 for the innuos pulsar !!

You could try the aries 2.2 from auralic to , not as nice app as the innuos sense but have different features like upsampling ..

(And streamers absolutely makes a big difference !!)

 

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Our audio club had a DAC “shoot out”, which included the HiFi Rose streamer.  The winner was the Node2i connected to the Schitt BioFrost 2, the last place finisher was the Rose.  I don’t know the other streamers you have mentioned, but it would be worth your time and money to take advantage of the 15 day trial Schitt offers.

 

Have you considered moding your Node with a linear power supply? I moded mine with a TeddyPardo LPS and the improvement was huge.  As mentioned in an post above,  software (OS) is extremely important in a streamer; it needs to support the streaming services that you want to use.  I strem Amazon HD and Idagio,  and the BluOS is the only OS that supports both of these services. I'm continuing to use my Node2i,  and have sent my PS Audio Directstream DAC Mk1 to J.K Richards (APS Audio Transformers) for their Signature Plus upgrade. 

+1, @oddiofyl

Buy a streamer that offers best possible UI (user interface) app and support. My recommendation would be Innuos or Aurender. And build quality of a streamer is just as important as their proprietary app as this would net in best possible SQ. 

I love my Aurender.   Their support is great and it’s built like a tank.   I have used Innuos several times and I thought it was a nice product.   

I think Bluesound is great, and I think the mistake people make is that lateral move.  Maybe you think the replacement hardware is better but in a lot of cases the UI is bad or even worse support is bad 

That’s why people spending $2k on an Eversolo is nuts to me when you can buy an Innuos or used Aurender for around the same or a little more.   Or less if you got an Innuos Mini      

 

 

I have Maggie 3.1 and i want to echo comment about "please, no subs" .  I have a very large room that needed additional Bass.  I use 2 bass panels.  They match the Maggies quickness and add warmth in the lower musical ranges without the boom and muddy effect.  no they don't shake the floor. if that's what you want then yes add the subs.  I also agree with the comment that: unfortunately the most important consideration of a streamer is a good app to run it.  My Matrix Audio Element-i has been rock solid, but the Matric Audio Player to run from my I-pad has been a PITA.  They are on their Third Version Update.  They maybe improve one item and screw up three others.  I spent 30 minutes finding how to get onto my Tidal account which was hidden behind a screen and then another 30 minutes to find my playlist which they buried in the least likley of places.  

Streamers don’t have a sound and I agree software would be the focus.  I would include Roon ready as a requirement because you may want that option at some point.

REL subs are fast enough to keep with Maggies.  If you use DWM bass panels keep the volume low on those…

Streamers don’t have a sound and I agree software would be the focus.

Well that’s just completely untrue, poor advice, and the words of someone with little/no experience comparing streamers and/or has a system or ears incapable of revealing the differences. Both sound and software are vitally important, and discount either at your peril.

Aurender is excellent. Build quality, sonics, UI are all great. Solid as a rock.
The newest series is also Roon ready. 

@soix

 

+1

 

I’ve owned streamers in the $3K —-> $22K range and each step up rendered significant sonic improvements… pretty much like every other component does. 

All good choices! I have 2 nodes and the software can't be beat. That being said, I switched my whole front end to a Moon 390, which incorporates a streamer and I have been very happy. I now mostly listen to my NAS or lps. 

Moon makes great products with a terrific warrantee and I think the 280 is worth a try. The software is very good, not BluOS good, but very good.
Good luck and have fun!

@soix

who the h are you?  Another audiophile has a different opinion from you.  Dude! Get over it! 

@mdalton Yeah, and I have a different opinion from him which is perfectly within my right. He came out and made a strong statement that I thought was ridiculous and rebutted it. That happens here — deal with it. BTW, the vast majority of people here agree with what I said, so get over that dude.

@soix

yes, I hate it when someone disagrees with me.  In that moment, I am compelled to tell that person that they don’t know what they’re talking about.  But I do wonder why i have no friends.  hmmmm…

 

@mdalton Maybe because they don’t like people who like to play mommy.  Hmmm.

ok, let’s do substance.  @jji666 said streamers don’t have a sound.  Completely reasonable, consistent with data and science,  Streamers handle a digital data stream, no conversion to analog.  The only possible differences across streamers is jitter and other noise, which is easy to measure.  Measurements of different streamers indicate de minimis differences re noise.  Therefore no differences in sound.  Many audiophiles experience no difference in sound across different streamers. Ergo, I’m your daddy.

@mdalton The vast majority of people here find meaningful differences in the impact streamers have on sound so you’re in the distinct minority, If you can’t hear differences between streamers then that’s sad but good for you, and I hear ASR calling your name hard.  Alvin is your daddy. 

@soix

Lol!  Well there’s your proof!  I assert that the”vast majority agree with me” (though without a poll). You must be right.  What was I thinking?  

 

 

 

@mdalton

Soix +2

"streamers don’t make a difference." Completely incorrect. Streamers make a huge difference. OP if you have the finances look at Playback Designs. Otherwise Aurender is a good choice.

 

@audphile1  Heh heh.  Yeah, my bad.  Alvin wouldn’t touch the nuts here. 

poor advice, and the words of someone with little/no experience comparing streamers and/or has a system or ears incapable of revealing the differences.

Or maybe someone who has spent a lot of time with streaming tech, has a good system with lots of options, and a good ear.

Soix is probably right when he says the majority agree with him, but this is a self selecting group.  Wouldn’t it be a pretty useless community if everyone had to agree on everything?  No need to throw insults to those with their own opinions.

 

 

Or maybe someone who has spent a lot of time with streaming tech, has a good system with lots of options, and a good ear.

Soix is probably right when he says the majority agree with him, but this is a self selecting group.

@jji666  Yup, a self-selecting group that use their ears.  Spending time with streaming tech is not the same as actually listening.  What streamers have you actually compared in your system?  I started streaming with an iPad and have had both the iFi Zen Stream and Innuos Zenith Mk3 in my system and the differences were patently obvious between all three — not even close, which is why saying all streamers sound the same is just ludicrous to me.  If you’ve tried better streamers and hear no difference then fine — sad, but fine — but just basing your argument on theory and tech experience is weak and not fully informed and won’t hold much weight here.  There’s a reason so many here have heard meaningful differences and have upgraded to better streamers, and it ain’t because all streamers have no sound or because they’re fooling themselves.

I have used mac mini with Roon, Auralic Aries G1 and Lumin U1 Mini with both native software and Roon as well as Tidal Connect, Bricasti M3 DAC internal network card as Roon endpoint and with Mconnect, and am currently using Aurender N200 streamer with both the native Conductor and as a Roon Endpoint. Not only do the streamers sound different, using the native processing on Auralic and Aurender sounds slightly better than Roon. Tidal connect and Mconnect sound slightly harsher/more “digital” to me than either Lumin native app or Roon.

I agree streamers don’t have a sound unless you drop them on the floor or hit them with a hammer. They sit there quietly and process the incoming data stream.

To understand why streamers or even the native processing vs. Roon sound different you need to spend some time reading, researching and understanding different designs and why a certain design decision was made, as well what in the streamer design and implementation influences sound quality. How certain designs are optimized for USB and others are optimized for SPDIF and what makes a difference between USB and SPDIF.
No one here owes anyone any explanation. Do your own ground work. And when ready, once your system reaches a certain level, you may want to compare few different streamers to hear it for yourself.
Saying a component in a signal chain doesn’t influence sound of your system is just not a good look.

To the OP:  As you can see, there are some on this forum whose beliefs/experiences suggest that you need to spend a material portion of your budget - relative to your DAC - on the streamer.  There are others, like me, whose beliefs/experiences suggest that if you spend more than a relatively small amount of $ (i.e., $250 to $2,000?) on a streamer, you may be spending money on features that have nothing to do with sound quality.  

In my experience, most of those who argue for substantial expenditures on streamers point to lower noise as the explanation for differences they claim to hear (if they offer an explanation at all), because that can be the only explanation!  And sometimes they cite manufacturer marketing materials promising “decreased jitter and noise”.

But here’s the rub.  Noise, particularly in the digital domain, is pretty easy to measure.  And yet there’s this weird cognitive dissonance among some when confronted with actual measurements of noise.  They claim you can’t measure it, accuse others of being Luddites for incorporating actual science and data into their decision-making process, resort to name-calling (I mean, I’ve even been called an “Alvin” for god’s sake, lol!), etc.

Let’s take jitter, for example.  The issue is not whether there’s no jitter, it’s whether there’s a substantial difference in jitter across streamers, how much jitter we’re talking about, and the extent to which different DACs reject jitter from streamers.

In my research, I have found the “lab report” section of HiFi News streamer reviews incredibly insightful.  For exposition, I’ve looked at the results from 11 different streamer reviews over about 4 years, with prices ranging from £1,000 to £33,000; in 5 of them they use a usb connection to a computer as their control scenario vs. the streamer, and then they use up to 3 different DACs with both the computer and the streamer.  All 11 of the reviews I’ve pulled feature the Mytek Brooklyn dac, 6 include the iFi Neo iDSD, and 4 include the AQ Dragonfly.  Here are some takeaways:

1) The Mytek has low jitter levels itself, and also is very effective at rejecting any streamer-induced jitter;

2) The iFi is a low jitter DAC, but is not nearly as effective at rejecting streamer-induced jitter; and 

3) The amount of jitter produced by all 11 of the streamers is very low, and doesn’t vary materially by price.

How did I arrive  at these conclusions?  Here are several snippets of the data:

- the single highest jitter number, 550 psec, was with the computer/iFi combo, substantially more than the computer/Dragonfly number (300 psec).

- but, when paired with a decent streamer (e.g., the Volumio Rivo or Aurender N200), the iFi’s jitter amount was substantially less than the Dragonfly (18 & 9 psec v. 150 & 135 psec, respectively.

- the Mytek’s jitter levels were never above 10 psec, whether using the computer or any one of the 11 streamers.  

That’s why even a Raspberry Pi can sound really good; many DACs, even moderately priced, do a very good job of rejecting jitter - and other sources of noise - from a streamer.  But there are decent DACs, in this case the iFi, that may not be engineered to reject jitter from a streamer.  So, to be safe, you can invest a little more than $150 and get a very low-jitter streamer.

And finally, I am most certainly not a welcome visitor to ASR and Amir.  After all, I use tube amps and spin vinyl, two technologies that Amir sh_ts on as from the fricking Middle Ages.

I hope this is helpful.

I hope this is helpful.

@mdalton  It’s not. 
 

There are others, like me, whose beliefs/experiences suggest that if you spend more than a relatively small amount of $ (i.e., $250 to $2,000?) on a streamer, you may be spending money on features that have nothing to do with sound quality.  

So, I see you have a Zen Stream and ProJect Stream Box so let’s just cut to the chase here.  What >$2k streamers have you had in your system that don’t sound any better than those?  An Innuos Zenith was superior on every level in my system relative to my Zen Stream with upgraded power supply — not even close, so it’d be very interesting to know on what you’re basing you’re contention that there’s no sonic benefit to spending more on a streamer.  Please share, or is it just your belief that more expensive streamers don’t sound better because numbers or other people say they don’t?

 

Soix. I’ve been thru this with him. He had formulated his opinion based upon what he read in the reviews and elsewhere on the internet…and he only made note of the material that fed into what he believes and deems logical and scientific. This guy is impenetrable. You’re embarking on a fools errand. 

@audphile1  Got it, and thanks.  Funny how impenetrable often coincides with unwilling/afraid to just use their own ears.  🙄

@audphile1

Please don’t speak for me, you’re wrong on the facts. 

@soix

It’s really not all about you, I was asking the OP if it was helpful, not you, lol!

Be that as it may, I have been streaming since 2004 - I was a very early adopter, obviously.  My experience of direct A/B comparisons during the last 20 years includes some in my system, some in friends’ systems, and some at dealers.   In addition to my original Musiccast system, I’ve owned Sonos and a wyred4Sound modified Sonos, both using external DACs, of course, and then more recently, the 6 streamers in my current systems (2 Bluesounds, the Pro-Ject, iFi, RPi in Okto DAC, Goldnote streamer/DAC) as well as a Raspberry Pi I built as an experiment for this very purpose.  Friends’ and dealers’ streamers I’ve A/B(ed) include DCS Bartok, Innuos Zenith, Simaudio Moon 681, various Aurender products, and others.  

I’ve sat next to a good friend who, being coached by a dealer, heard things I simply did not.  I know he thought he heard them, and I honestly believe the dealer did too.  (This friend, btw, is almost 10 years older than me - over 70 - and has definitely experienced greater hearing loss than my 63-year-old self, so it wasn’t my hearing!). Aural memory sucks, valid A/B comparisons are difficult, and confirmation bias is challenging. 

In summary, I didn’t start doing research and reading reviews until recently, almost 20 years after I began listening to streamers in all sorts of environments with lots of different gear.  This research has only served to validate my 20 years of experience.  It certainly helps explain my experience, and I offer it to others to help them as they try to sort their way thru the disparate views and experiences on this forum and others, including yours.

I don’t really understand why my contrary views are such a threat to your constitutive self.  Oh well.  I’m quite sure we’d enjoy each other’s systems, certainly more than each other’s company, lol!