can i improve my system with a better cd player?


I upgraded just about everything except my cd player. I just use my old sony dvp s7000 as my cd player. In the past I thought all cd player were the same until yesterday when I tried using my ps3 as the player. I instantly heard a big difference. Now I'm thinking I can actually improve my sound by buying a new player can someone recommend something under 500 buciks? I like buying used since my system is dated itself but it still sounds decent to me.
monterey

Showing 5 responses by hifihvn



06-23-11: Monterey
Is this correct to assume. If i connect the cd player to my yamaha via RCA's, I am using the CD player to decode. If I connect the cd player via a toslink to the yamaha, I'm letting the yamaha decode??
Monterey (Threads | Answers | This Thread)

Yes, if you have only a Toslink connected, then the Yamaha is doing all of the D/A conversation and making your music.

If you use RCA only to the Yamaha, the player is making the music with its built in DAC.

If you have both connections (RCA and Toslink) used, that would depend on what you have it set to do.

In general, the DAC makes more of a difference than the transport (no DAC) used, unless the transport is of poor quality, or not working as it should
I couldn't tell you about that comparison. But, why not try the better of what you have, hook them up with both connections, and A/B each ones internal DAC against the Yamaha
DAC and see if any of them fit your needs. If one sounds a lot better, there's $500 for something else.

06-25-11: Monterey
so the cd player connects to the DAC via a toslink and then the dac to the preamp(yamaha) via RCA?
Monterey (Threads | Answers | This Thread)

Yes, that's correct. Some also have a coaxial digital output that looks like a regular RCA line level cables(just one for stereo). If both have the RCA coaxial,plus Toslink, some like this(coax) as the preferred hookup, a lot of the time. The Toslink may be better for around TV's and other electronics that can cause electrical interference. This interference might cause something like harshness, or some other problem sound wise that you may not know, without doing an A/B between the two types of digital connection that are used. Also the quality of the DAC. A typical DAC that has been around for years, may just do CD's, and possibly two channel if your cable/satellite box if it has the proper output and settings. A DVD may not work through some of them(most likely in two channel) . A CD has only a 44.1 khz output. But some DAC's are capable of decoding more sources, that run at higher frequencies. I'm not up to date enough to give info for that. Google what you can, and ask here, and someone more up to date might be able to answer those questions. Also, if you use a coax digital cable(looks like regular RCA hookups), there are preferred lengths that work better. Someone else would give a better answer. I think mine is 1.5 meters, but can be wrong. The RCA type is made for digital, and using a regular RCA interconnect(for coax) like your using now, may not work right. I'll leave that for others. Wiki link for basic, and others might have better links. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital-to-analog_converter]
Some also have a coaxial digital output that looks like a regular RCA line level cables(just one for stereo).
Let me clarify. I mean one coax is used for multichannel/stereo, just like the one Toslink. If I made other errors, I hope they're found and get corrected by others.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S/PDIF
Oops, try above link again. A little more info.[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S/PDIF]