Is it the transport or DAC that enables HDCD/Red?


Good morning all,
I am new to transports and seperate DAC's. I recently purchased a Parasound CBD 2000 Belt Drive Transport and am looking to buy a DAC.

However, I am not sure what signal the transport is to provide in order for me to play HDCD as well as Redbook CD's. Should I expect the transport to provide the HDCD and Redbook signal or does the DAC do all the work?

Does balanced in/outputs produce a better sound than does regular RCA in/outputs?

Right now I am looking for a compact DAC (the smaller the better) that offers good to excellent sound for not a lot of money. I listen to classical (choral/orchestral) and jazz music. I love the human voice and large scale orchestral and choral works.

What shoud I be looking for since this is all a mystery to me at this point. I am just being honest. I really don't know what's happening in this area. By the way, I would be pleased if you would offer some of your choices please.

Finally, I am reading more so that I can learn more. Thanks so much for your understanding and input. Have a great and wonderful day and weekend.
rbwinterlink

Showing 2 responses by swanny76109

If the transport decodes HDCD and the DAC does not and you feed the digital signal to the DAC, you won't get HDCD decoding. If the transport does not and the DAC does and you feed the digital signal to the DAC it will decode HDCD.

In my instance my older Rotel transport does decode HDCD but my DAC does not. So, if I want HDCD decoding, I can use my analog outputs to my preamp and listen that way. But I find the DAC sounds better even without the decoding.

The older generation DACs offer HDCD, but I think most newer ones do not.
The grateful dead continue to release HDCD recordings and they generally sound reaaly good. Still anachronistic after all these years. I believe they were early supporters of the pacific microsonics technology that they used in the mastering process-- being from berkeley and all