Computer to DAC Streamer
I am looking to get a digital-to-digital streamer for my new office system. I currently have a Sonare microRendu and that unit will move to another room once my new office system is built up. I also use ROON. I was originally considering getting a DAC with Ethernet streaming built-in but I may require a DAC with DSP and those DACs do not have this feature. I should add that the Linn SELEKT DSM streamer/DAC has Ethernet streaming and DSP but lacks the analog inputs I need (it also sounds excellent).
It has been suggested to me to buy an Innous streamer to get my music across to the DAC. However, I am trying to understand why these products are better than my current noisy computer combined with the micrRendu digital-to-digital type products. Anybody done a comparison? Is it because of noise on the Ethernet wire polluting the DAC?
http://innuos.com/en
In no particular order the following streamers have have come up in my research as being better than the microRendu I currently own (I have not heard these) :
Simaudio Mind2
https://simaudio.com/en/product/mind2-network-player/
Sonare Signiture Rendu
http://www.sonore.us/Signature-Rendu-SE.html
Auralic G2 Aeris
https://us.auralic.com/products/aries-g2
I am interested in the feedback or thought process of people who were making the same streamer decision as me. What did you guys end up getting or looking to get? I know there are a lot of lower costs alternatives and I am open to anything that will take my to the top tier sound level.
My preamp/DAC choice is looking like it will be the Anthem STR.
It has been suggested to me to buy an Innous streamer to get my music across to the DAC. However, I am trying to understand why these products are better than my current noisy computer combined with the micrRendu digital-to-digital type products. Anybody done a comparison? Is it because of noise on the Ethernet wire polluting the DAC?
http://innuos.com/en
In no particular order the following streamers have have come up in my research as being better than the microRendu I currently own (I have not heard these) :
Simaudio Mind2
https://simaudio.com/en/product/mind2-network-player/
Sonare Signiture Rendu
http://www.sonore.us/Signature-Rendu-SE.html
Auralic G2 Aeris
https://us.auralic.com/products/aries-g2
I am interested in the feedback or thought process of people who were making the same streamer decision as me. What did you guys end up getting or looking to get? I know there are a lot of lower costs alternatives and I am open to anything that will take my to the top tier sound level.
My preamp/DAC choice is looking like it will be the Anthem STR.
65 responses Add your response
Dave That's going to be a tough one to tackle if you want the name to start with "Audio." Why not just change the name to Audio Doctor, N.J.? In today's audio environment the product line being current is more important than the name from my perspective. A web designer may be one of the most important employee's for a current audio dealer especially if you frequently change brands. Look at what the web designer has to go through with a dealer like Kevin at Upscale. |
try this one which is our new in development site https://audiodoctor.com/wp new additions Golden Ear and probably a few others also missing PSB https://audiodoctor.com/wp/our-brands/ |
Dave Just a thought. Maybe all the time you spend posting here would be better served by making your own website more current and accurate than this if this is you. https://www.audiodoctor.com/ |
Dep there are two of us, Dave the owner, which is me, I do most of the posts, on occasion Troy writes in. Troy comes in on weekends and helps evaluate new components and does turntable setups. We do a lot of market research and bring in a lot of new components for testing. For example we are testing Phison currently, and just brought in Golden Ear. In 2018 we brought in Krell. Our line list is very extensive and we read all the on line and magazines. If we find another product which is better we move out of that one and bring in the new one. Dave and Troy Audio Doctor NJ |
Yes Troy, I realize that Innuos, like all of the brands you carry are the absolute best values around. I think by now everyone on Audiogon realizes that. I have my thoughts on Innuos also. I’m sure they are solid units. I don’t think the Salk is the best thing since sliced bread. I’ve not stated that. It’s a reasonably priced unit that offers a lot of bang for the buck. Jim is a good guy, provides great value etc. I don’t make a dime off of my opinions here either. Just a life long audiophile with my own opinions and experiences. I will say that Jim Salk provides awesome support and a heck of a product for the money. Just like his speakers. Heck, in my own post I also suggested a newer unit that measures extremely well and offers a bit of an alternative. As for other units. I’ve demoed and owned quite a few. Personally I’ve noticed a much bigger difference in DAC’s than I have the streamers. For me the Salk offered a great value at the time, I still think it does and would for many. Heck, recently I even admitted that for the first time in 30 years plus of being an audiophile that I felt a cable made a true difference - my USB cable from my Streamer to my DAC. Absolutely felt it made a difference. So yes, I do a fair amount of my own A/B on my own and I’m of course open to change. Lots of equipment out there I feel sounds "Better/different" to my ears than what I own. Just a matter of where I allocate resources aka cashola in my system. One question however. You really love to globalize and use "we" instead of "I". Why not just "own" your own opinion? "As we stated earlier". Do you and Troy jointly sit down and type each and every one of your posts declaring what you sell to be the absolute best values at every given price point out there? I (just me, alone posting here by myself) was wondering? |
Dep14 of course you are happy with your Salk streamer, most people are happy with what they own. The reality is that the only way you know if you would be "more" happy would be to do an A/B vs a better streamer. As we stated earlier the Salk seems to be a pretty ordinary mini pc design, if you compared that to an Innous Zen or a Zenith you should get dramatically better sound. We have also found that a streamer when feed a better signal still sounds far better than a direct connection to the internet. Dave and Troy Audio Doctor NJ Innous dealers |
I’m happy with my Salk streamer into an oppo Sonica DAC. The Salk is reasonably priced, works great as a Roon Core, streamer, and server. Can be had with a SSD, and upgraded power supply. My CDs are all ripped so transfer was a snap. I don’t want the hassle, expense, and noise from a cd drive, so there is that. That said, short of music I can’t get via qobuz or tidal (tool, Metallica) I don’t see needing to rip again. So, the unit I might look today at is the matrix audio element X. Top of the line DAC built in, and measurements were outstanding on Audio Science Review. Best measurements they have run. 3k. I think a lot of what it comes down to is if you want an outboard DAC or not. But if you see yourself streaming a lot more than using your ripped music, having the Dac built in with the streamer offers a lot of advantages. |
@mgrif104 Congrats on the new streamer. I am sure it will sound good. I am starting to feel that all of the streamers discussed in this thread are rather good and some are great. I am looking for great (reason for thread). I felt the NAD m12/m22 system I demoed was very good but the same speakers with Simaudio was almost great. However, the $$$ cost was way higher on the Simaudio system. The cost factor also goes into my feelings on my audio happiness. |
Hey yyzsantabaraba, just fyi - I decided to purchase an Auralic Aries G2 Streamer from Audio Advisor. I will post to this forum after I get it setup and settled in. I’ll be able to compare it directly to my Aurender N100H and Bluesound Node 2 units I have in other systems. As you know, I’ve been a bit over the map on streamers for a system in a remote location. I expect it to handily eclipse those two units. For me, I think the issue might end up being whether or not my preamp/DAC (NAD M12) and amp (NAD M22) are up to snuff. If I really like the streamer, I may exchange the Aries G2 for the Vega G2 which has the streamer/DAC and preamp all in one. Also still under consideration are the T+A DAC 8 (thanks Audiotroy), the Lumin S2, and Linn Selekt DSM. I hope I’m soon to hop off the equipment merry go round. Stay tuned. mgrif104 |
@shredder Thanks for the explanation. Sounds like I should contact Sonare and talk with one of their reps about the optical. @emcdade I actually have this same thread on CA but the responses here have been more enlightening. What you are saying is what I am seeing to a reasonable extent with my microRendu. However, with the new more resolving DAC I will buy, even Sonare tells me to get something better than the mircroRendu. I spoke to a dealer yesterday , who I think is a straight shooter, about his thoughts on Aurender, SimAudio Mind2 and 390 Network Player that he carries (also Anthem dealer). His response to me was the following (edited): I think that my first choice for the streamers would be the MOON 390. It sounds very nice, does ROON, and MQA, as well as it has so many other features. It is like an audio Swiss Army Knife. We have compared it with other DACs and Streamers, and unless you are willing to double your money at least you won’t find a better sounding unit. At the moment I am going in with the assumption that I need the Anthem STR preamp with room correction. Thus a streamer and/or server is needed too. However, if my home demo of speakers shows that the acoustic room treatments I have suffice and the Anthem room correction is not needed, then the Moon 390 Network player seems like a serious contender. |
Go over to Computer Audiophile. A lot of people here have no idea how this stuff even works, as evidenced by the comments so far. Laughable to me that people would assume the junk network streamer thrown into a Directstream DAC is better than any USB output. Anyway I will say if you already have a low noise network streamer you are heading down the path of seriously diminishing returns by upgrading the back end server to an “audio grade” component if you plan to keep the streamer in use in your listening room. The goal here is to pass the cleanest waveform possible with the least amount of noise to the DAC section. No magic fairie dust. |
The optical version streams data from an optical network instead of an ethernet network. The optical network is easy to setup. All that is required is an ethernet to optical converter (Trendnet makes a good cheap one, Sonore has a fancier one), an optical module that comes with the streamer, and an optical cable (not a Toslink, however, which is not a great solution I have been told). As I understand it (and I am not tech minded), an optical cable does not carry electrical noise and thus use of such a network dramatically reduces noise in your system. I can attest to that from an sq perspective, the box is dead quite now. As compared to the MR, the Signature Rendu (and you may already know this) is essentially an Ultrarendu with a very high end power supply all in one box. Even without the optical solution, it sounds far better than the MR, although I found the non-optical version to be a touch bright. The Optical version is much smoother and analog sounding. For a better explanation than I can provide, check this out: https://twitteringmachines.com/review-sonore-signature-rendu-se-systemoptique/ |
The marketdoes not lie. Nobody would be purchasing While I am a huge fan and student of markets, i completely disagree. The fact that people *want* something proves nothing about its superior properties, or audibility thereof. People buy homeopathy, ICOs, pyramid schemes, horoscopes, large cap equity managers, Tice clocks, etc. That does not demonstrate their superiority, only a preference, which may involve wishful thinking, status-seeking, a need for company, or bad probabilistic thinking. There's even a lively debate in economics about the value of most college educations and whether they constitute signaling more than qualification. Things are not what they seem. |
@dpac996 Your observations mirror mine regarding a noisy or busy computer streaming to a Rendu. I do not hear any difference when I have a lot of programs running on my computer. I have very good hearing (one of a few things I am good at). However, the issue is whether a dedicated audio server is better than the noisy computer - Rendu approach. Quite a few posters are saying there is an audible difference with a dedicated server. |
@mgrif104 I had to do a little research on the Aurender N100H and the feedback you provided was what I was looking for. There are so many factors when considering getting the bits to your DAC. - location of hard drive - type of hard drive - wired vs wireless - Ethernet or USB out from source - Type of input into a DAC - use an internal DAC in a streamer - cables - ROON | JRiver | others - quality of audio system playing the tunes I can find a link somewhere online from reviewers, manufacturers, and users that argue for various combination of these things with so much divergence in opinion. Good thing is that almost all combinations of the approaches today sound better than in the days of my old Squeezebox (2004ish). This old dog is starting to think that maybe I need to learn a new trick and give a dedicated audio server a shot. |
Can anyone point me to measurements of electrical noise on various USB ports captured by a high precision (16 bit) oscilloscope? I would love to see if there is any noise on the data lines (+/-) as well as ground and +5VBUS from a "noisy PC" compared to the same measurements on dedicated hardware streamers like Auralic, ultraRendu, etc. I doubt these measurements exist because it would be tricky to probe these signals; one would need a 500MHz (or faster) high precision active differential probe connected to nearest VIA's or attached as direct to the connector pinout as possible. You would need an active session with an enumerated device on the bus receiving active packets. Perhaps one does not need to measure the data lines, but just the +5V and GND signals; I have not heard any difference between my 2018 Xenon Lenovo, Sonore ultraRendu with Linear supply, home built windows 10 pro, or my totally killer BOXX work machine when streaming directly to my Exogal Comet plus DAC. I plug my headphones directly into the Exogal and it always sounds amazing; No change in noise floor, no static, no loss of resolution, just beautiful music; These PC's all run Roon Core, Tidal, or Qobuz native apps, and more recently Audirvana. I am not a cable skeptic, nor power conditioner. I have heard REAL and changes with my stuff all plugged into an Isotek Aquarius EVO3 (I heard NO improvement when stuff connected into Furman). I have heard differences in speaker cables and power cords as well; There is much marketing talk about "noisy desktop PC's" but I have not come across anyone publishing USB noise comparison measurements. So, I guess I am skeptical that there is any actual electrical difference in terms of broadband noise on any of the nets mentioned above (D+/D-, +5V, GND); |
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Wow. I just read the summary findings of the blog posted by YYZSantabarbara. I really disagree with the bloggers findings. I changed to an Aurender N100H (bottom of the line) from a dedicated Mac mini (nothing else was ever open or running on it - all settings were optimized for the task) and the difference was clear. The Aurender was simply superior - and this was not on a highly resolving system. Servers make as big a difference as the DAC in my experience. I now have a Bluesound Node 2 (moved the Aurender to a different location) in that simple system and it too sounds better than the Mac using the same outboard DAC and cables. That the blogger can’t hear differences in jitter is also surprising. I would politely correct one part of this discussion - it’s not data that’s corrupted (the bits are still there), but noise accompanying that data and timing errors in the spooling and reading of the data that, I believe, are the difference. Is there a difference in hard drives? I don’t know. I’m guessing it’d be subtle, but given EMI being radiated and the fact that there’s a buffer in there, why would it be impossible? I haven’t heard the Innuous servers - I’d like to but they’re not available in my area. But, I’ve heard some of the Aurender and Lumin units. Servers don’t sound the same. Whether or not they’re worth the price is personal preference. But, those who claim there’s no difference and likely doing so from expectation, not experience. |
Archimago reads like one of those people that argue that cables dont matter, power cables dont matter, power conditioners are bunk. Jitter is very audible. The facts are digital is sensitive to corruption if not people wouldnt hear differences between digital cables or transports. Also talk to the happy Innous, Aurender, Auralic customers who replaced computers with these devices. The market does not lie. Nobody would be purchasing these devices if they didnt produce audibily superior results. On the contrary we have a lot of very happy Innous customers. Dave and Troy Audio Doctor NJ innous dealers |
@ahofer Nice link you posted. I went through some articles on this bloggers site and came across this very interesting article that is asking the same question as my thread. The thing I cannot understand is when people like this blogger state that the streamer does not matter and when guys like Audiotroy, Darko, et al say otherwise. I cannot discount all the people saying there is a difference and will do a home demo of some of these music servers and see for myself. Maybe an Innous | Auralic G2 | Sonare microRendu comparison. I will have to wait until later this year when I get a better system to test this out. http://archimago.blogspot.com/2018/12/measurements-intel-i7-pc-and-raspberry.html Summary:Well then... Let’s wind this down and draw a few conclusions based on the data: |
Rbseteno, You really need to go back to digital design 101. Point 1: EMI affects jitter in all digital systems. Point 2: Mechanical Hard Drives vs Non Mechanical Hard Drives A mechanical hard drive by definition creates and radiates a greater amount of noise which is not just mechanical noise, but with the additional complexity of a moving hard drive's spinning motor, moving platers and other parts, you are going to generate greater amounts of noise which is directly being transfered into the digital signal, and this doesn't matter if your server is in the same room or in a different room then your dac.. An SSD has no moving parts, no motors, and will therefore by definition by quieter because it is not radiating noise into your digital signal. Point 3: Empirical evidence vs a perceived expert who by definition will allready have a closed mind. So a guy comes up and tells you that a particular hard drive sounds better did you stop and ask him how he came to this conclusion or did you tell him it is all bunk because I work for a hard drive manufaturer. The guy who actually tested different hard drives if his testing methology is vailid and kept the same identical test scenario, perhaps has emprical evidence that in his tests his results were indeed valid and that he was getting better results from one hard drive then another, that doesn't mean his experiences are 100% valid unless other people did the exact same test. Point 4: Yesterday just to make sure we are 100% correct in our findings ran a simple experiment, because we are a store, we have multiple servers in three different rooms. Here was the test: Krell K300i Roon endpoint, volume was identical on all three Roon devices; All servers were sending the Krell Roon packeted data over an ethernet connection. Two servers were in an differnt room one server was in the same room on the same switch as the Krell K3001. Played the same track at the same level on three different devices: 1: Innous Zenith MK II 2: Innous Statement 3: Baetis Reference server Was there a difference and was that difference audible yes it was. The Statement sounded far more realisitic, the soundstage was more dimensional, there was far greater attack with greatly improved dynamics. The Baetis was reduced in these areas but still sounded very good. The older MK II Innous which was the least expensive server sounded the worst, with a much flatter soundstage, and reduced dynamics, bass and resolution. You are welcome to come to our shop and hear the demo for yourself. So the take away was yes servers over ethernet do sound audibly different. As per previous tests we did compare modified Mac Minis over USB vs Aurender, and Auralic servers and the dedicated servers sounded far better. Again if you think about noise from the CPU and other chips affecting the digital data flowing out of the server which in the case of a Mac is not designed solely to eliminate radiated noise from affecting music signals it should be obvious that a purposefully designed device will always beat a jack of all trades device not designed for that purpose. Last point: "Since I use the ps audio DS dac, I haven’t had any corrupt data or any digital waveform corruption processing data thru Ethernet, no lost packets, and no packets out of order. I must have the only Mac that doesn’t corrupt data, lucky me " How do you know? By your previous assertions that data from a Mac is just as good as a dedicated server it certainly sounds like you have not made that test. We also didn't say Auralic Aries were junk we did say the previous versions didn't sound that good and the sound quality of digital today is very different from five years ago. Ted Smith is a talented engineer but he is not a greater genius then anyone else that makes great digital, and it is impossible to completely extract a pristine digital data signal that one has allready been corupted by noise which is affecting the modulated wave form which contains your binary packets. Again we did the test three servers, different room, all over the same ethernet network and all three servers sounded different, same track, same durration, exact same volume, same speakers, same amp. So unlike you we don't work for a hard drive manufactuer we test audio products that are proven to be market leaders. So it seems that Innous really does know how to make a fantastic sounding server. Dave and Troy Audio Doctor NJ Innous dealers |
Audiotroy-ssd’s sound better than a disk drive? Mac’s corrupt data? Computers screw up digital waveforms? Do you make this stuff up? Auralic streamers are junk? Somebody at an audio show tried to tell me they only use a certain hard drive because it sounds better than the others. When I told him that I worked for the leading hard drive manufacturer, he changed his tune. You probably should read some of Ted Smiths articles on digital instead of trying to sell equipment you carry. Since I use the ps audio DS dac, I haven’t had any corrupt data or any digital waveform corruption processing data thru Ethernet, no lost packets, and no packets out of order. I must have the only Mac that doesn’t corrupt data, lucky me |
Archimago is good on this subject (see below). "Data integrity" loss sounds like nonsense to me, but noise isolation seems real. I use a server in a separate room. Going direct I had the best results with Audirvana and a mac. The high end dedicated servers seem like another area where the differences are very small, if that, relative to the bucks, but I have only heard a few. Some are clearly just an effort to take advantage of digital illiterates. https://archimago.blogspot.com/2014/01/musings-audio-pc-music-server-htpc.html |
I found this link today and it has reviews of a few of the items mentioned here (see bottom of page). Sounds like the reviewer is using a streaming method like me. https://www.audiostream.com/content/sonore-simple-design-signature-rendu-se Another comparison of Ethernet-to-digital https://www.audiostream.com/content/audiophile-conundrum-sonore-vs-sotm |
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@steakster I have read about the Empirical Audio Off-Ramp 5 and it was getting a lot of good reviews. However, I was thinking that it maybe a bit like my microRendu in the fact that it is a relatively older unit. I am a little biased when it comes to digital and looking at the most recent tech. For analog I am not like this and I am looking to buy a new amp that originally came out in 2014 (or earlier). |
@audioman58 I know a lot of people prefer JRiver (which I also own) to ROON. My current system is not good enough for me to hear much of a difference (a Pearchtree Nova 150 integrated with DAC). I prefer the GUI on ROON over everything else. Around 1998 I was thinking of writing a software program (Windows GUI based) to manage my CD and LP collection. I would have designed it very similar to the GUI JRiver currently uses (or 2 versions back). My point is that JRiver should step it up and become a better competitor to ROON. |
One observation that surprised me and validates something that Audiotroy is saying about Ethernet was a YouTube video I saw of GTT Audio’s display at Axpona 2019. Audiotroy’s comment below: I have been following the Mola Mola Tambaqui DAC/Streamer and Makua preamp/DAC for a while now. The Tambaqui just recently came out and is now in the hands of a few owners. It is getting rave reviews by users. One of many things that interested me on this DAC was the built-in Ethernet streaming on the Tambaqui (the Makua will get this streaming feature soon). However, at Axpona 2019, GTT Audio was stating that their best streaming performance was obtained by using the Auralic G2. I was surprised at that thinking that direct to Ethernet (and less components) would be better. Auralic CEO has stated on a Computer AUdiophile thread that they do not like to have a harddrive on the internal G2 chasis even though they have this feature. It also supports external harddrives via USB. If I could talk to the Innous designers I would make the suggestion of removing the CD transport and making a streamer only product. I was searching on their site for such a product and they don’t seem to have that. For someone who is very computer literate as myself I got the sense that the Innous products were targeted at non-computer experts, which is a much bigger target audience. |
Jplay is the best sounding media player, I have installed much quieter SS drives ,platinum super quiet power supplies and jplay has super optimized very low noise boards for usb, as well for Ethernet a Dramatic difference with these 2 boards alone under $900 and stillgives me great flexibility to use my top graphics card and use dead quiet Noqtua worlds best heatpipe to cool processor at noise levels that are super clear even tidal takes on a new level on resolution , and without question Jplay has tons of reviews who agree it is the best sounding media player. i have JRivers 25 also, Jrivers. Is better. |