Cable for Lynx card to Berkeley DAC


Does anyone have information an a better cable to connect a Lynx card to a Berkeley DAC than the standard Lynx breakout cable?

thanks
shaq

Showing 3 responses by earflappin

Ral - sorry for the delay in responding. Thanks for your kind comments. The Zalman silent music server and Alpha DAC are producing the best digital sound I've heard. On Hi-Rez material to my ears the Alpha DAC is better than vinyl.

For remote control I use a Toshiba netbook running WinXP Pro with Remote Desktop Connection. I have found it works great even with the netbook communicating wirelessly to the Zalman via my wireless router.

Yes, I run the Alpha DAC directly into my amps. It sounds fantastic. I was leery of a digital attenuator, but in speaking with the brain trust at Berkeley I got comfortable. I tried a couple of SOTA pre-amps just to experiment, but they degraded the sound. I don't do analog anymore so I don't need a phono stage or multiple analog inputs. In terms of attenuation, I am generally at 30-50db on the 60 max scale of the Alpha DAC. The nice thing about the Atma-Sphere M-60 amp is that I can pull power tubes so that Alpha DAC runs closer to top of range.

My speakers are very efficient with a relatively flat impedance curve and roll off at 50hz as they are a sealed box two way design. I use servo subs for LF. Therefore, the XA30.5 has more than enough power to drive my speakers to very loud levels. I can never get the bias needle to move on the XA30.5 so more power is not needed.

Hope this answers your questions. Happy listening.
I initially used an inexpensive Gotham HD26 to XLR cable which was pretty good. But, depending on how resolving your system is, the quality of your hearing and the value you place on accuracy, I have found that the Cardas Clear HD26 to XLR cable to be easily superior to the Gotham. But...it is considerably more money. In my system to my ears its worth it. Of course, audio is like wine, only the individual can assess price vs value. I use a Zalman fanless music server with the Lynx AES16 card, the Berkeley Alpha DAC, a Pass Labs XA30.5 and Atma-Sphere M-60 amplifiers and Geddes Abbey speakers.
Ral,

The Lynx card only has the HD26 pin out, therefore, your best single cable solution is a HD26-to-XLR cable. Otherwise, you're talking two cables - one to convert HD26 to XLR and then an XLR-XLR cable. Of course this would degrade sonic quality since you have multiple connectors in the signal path.

If you are the least bit handy technically you can save big $$ by buying the components for the Zalman yourself. That's what I did. It's pretty simple to install the motherboard, Lynx card, memory, optical drive and SSD or spinning driver yourself. But you do need to know your way around WinXP and be comfortable assembling hardware. Goodwins is a class outfit so that's the way to go if you want one pre-built.

My netbook runs WinXP Pro and it comes standard with Remote Desktop Connection. You just run it to connect to the Zalman. You need to set up a domain and a password, but that's easy.

In terms of playback software I use Samplitude as I've found it sonically superior to all the other programs. However....!!!...it is a pro piece of software and only plays one song at a time so it's not for everyone. I also load my music files into a RAM drive as it sounds better than having them pulled off the SSD. Also, solid state drives (SSD) sound better than spinning drives. Again, these things may not matter or be audible in some systems so to each their own. If you want maximum convenience and user friendliness than MediaMonkey is a good choice as a software player. I would not use iTunes.