Memory Players


Hi Folks.

Well, the upgrade itch has got me and it may be time to once again dip my toe into the technology pool. It's actually been a while since the last "itch", so I'm O.K. with it.

I am still using a Denon DVD500 as my digital reference source. This unit was a giant killer in it's day with it's heavily constructed chassis, extensive shielding, and those wonderful Burr Brown 1704 24/96 dacs.

Unfortunately, CD quality has worsened. The discs seem thinner, the discs sometime vibrate, then vibrating the dacs, blah, blah, blah.

Who has experience with either the Nova or PS Audio Memory Players (or others like it) and what could you tell me?

I extracted the information below from what I believe to be the old Nova website. It's very interesting.

"“Read-until-Right” is the principle that lies at the heart of the Nova Physics Group Memory Player and that enables it to achieve its stunning sonic effects. When a CD is placed in the Memory Player, the laser will first read the disc like any other CD player, but what distinguishes the Memory Player is what happens when the laser encounters a hard to read spot on the disc (and this happens hundreds or even thousands of times per disc, either from dirt, scratches, surface imperfections or eccentricity). A standard CD player at this point will introduce Error Code Correction or Error Concealment Correction (ECC) and Parity Bits. The Memory Player disables ECC and Parity Bits and engages its Read-Until-Right (RUR) and Dynamic Laser Positioning (DLP) software. RUR attempts to retrieve the original information on the disc by engaging its DLP that repeatedly shifts the laser angle. Only when the information can’t be extracted after hundreds of attempts do Error Code Correction and Parity Bits kick in, creating as perfect a theoretical facsimile of the missing information as possible, as in standard CD players."
buscis2

Showing 1 response by dev

Try and have a listen, when I heard The Memory Player a few years ago after one of the reviewers hyped it up;

#1 was not easy to use

#2 had quirks

#3 for what it was a fairly cheap cabinet and not much inside but very exspensive did not have me opening up my wallet.

#4 continuous upgrades but some specific models were not available to up grade.

The latest one is suppose to have fixed allot of this including just being different all arround and is actually allot less costly also so best you get one that is broken-in and have a listen, we are still talking close to $10K, far from being pocket change.

The PS Audio, I keep reading this and that and have had one in my set-up and it was sonically disappointing compared to my red-book set-up so again best you get one if interested and have a listen in your own set-up.