Confused About Relative Sonic Impact of DAC VS. Transport


I've borrowed a Heed DT Transport to use in place of my Jollida JD100 CDP and am confused by what I'm hearing. 
My DAC is R2R ladder/non-oversampling Aqua La Voce. With Jolida in system, the sound is on the warm side of neutral without verging into tube-like, euphonics. With the Heed transport, all I seem to notice are the liabilities of every CD I play. 

If the Heed is more efficient at reading data from the CD than the Jolida, does this mean I am hearing the effect of the DAC more clearly, or am I hearing the effect of more information from the disc?

At first, I enjoyed the increased resolution, but with further listening, the sound, overall, strikes me as "thin" (as though lacking lower mids) and the highs verge on fatiguing. 

Switching out footers has some effect, as does tweaking my Schitt Loki EQ, but I'm still not very happy.

Excuse my French, but WTF is going on, here ?

BTW, John Darko, when reviewing the Aqua, recommended it as a particularly good choice for harsh-sounding CDs. 





stuartk

Showing 2 responses by orpheus10


Although the question is ancient, I forgot to answer it to the best of my ability. When I purchased the Theta transport, the difference was massive; they make a huge difference, but the increased resolution seems to be a bad thing in your case.

Since I have at my disposal someone with a degree in computers, maybe I shouldn't get in this conversation because since he's optimized my computer for CD playback I no longer think in ancient terms of transport and DAC, only experiment with DAC's.

As Melm stated,  
melm332 posts
05-03-2019 3:57pm
The best transport is no transport. Rip your disks and let your DAC play at its best.

Ages ago I had a "Theta" transport which was big as a tank, expensive, and functioned quite well, but I think Melms solution is just as good and a lot cheaper. Anyway, that's the way I'm going with an external hard drive that for all practical purposes will not run out of space.

While I admit I'm one of those fossil audiophiles who don't know squat about computers, it sure is a blessing to have someone close who does, and it might behoove you to do likewise.

Advice is a funny thing; "Wise men don't need it, and most people won't heed it".