Onhwy61 - the iRiver units have optical digital outputs. (iHP-120 and iHP-140) These would allow a user to connect the devices to a DAC.
See link below:
iRiver iHP-120
.
See link below:
iRiver iHP-120
.
Got iPod, how to hook up?
Onhwy61 - the iRiver units have optical digital outputs. (iHP-120 and iHP-140) These would allow a user to connect the devices to a DAC. See link below: iRiver iHP-120 . |
South_park - sorry you're having trouble. In my system the iPod sounds quite nice FWIW. I suspect you are trying to use the FM Wireless mode of connecting the iPod to the system. For better results, you might try the Zu Cable Pivot interconnect. The Pivot is a "high(er)end" cable which would allow you to connect your portable devices to your system (preamp, or direct to the amp). The Pivot has a mini connector and two R/L RCA connectors Link to the Pivot on the ZuCable website: Zu Cable Pivot List price for a 1.5 meter Pivot is $99 but Zu Cable has frequent auctions on Ebay and you should be able to pick one up for less than half that. Do a search on Ebay for "Zu Cable" . |
South park, Just an FYI... I don't claim enormous miracle improvements with the Zu Cable but I do find it to be much better sonically than any stock or Monster type cable I used prior to finding the Zu Cable Pivot. Since you do not use the FM transmitter, I presume you may find improvements by using a ripping software like EAC. The iPod actually belongs to my wife and she's in charge of content. She rips to 192 using iTunes (i think) and I believe she selects AAC encoding (or whatever Apple's format is). At that bitrate, the iPod actually sounds quite good - believe it or not. While it lacks much of the dimension of CD's, it is certainly not as bad as I expected - especially at that bitrate. I have not tried WAV files on the iPod. Going back a few years, if memory serves me, I believe WAV was originally a Microsoft-specific format & at the time when WAV first appeared, Apple/SGI/Sun + others used AIFF for uncompressed audio storage - Microsoft used WAV only. As time passed, WAV became more of a standard which could be executed on almost every computer but...part of the problem could potentially be that Apple just doesn't put as much effort into how it decodes WAV files vs. its own proprietary format. **I have not researched this and it is therefore pure speculation. |