I hope it is ok to copy and paste from the Mereidian forum on what I think is a very well thought-out and written opinion on the "why better",
"I thought I should start a thread as I am an 808.3 owner and have been for going on three weeks now. Prior to owning the 808.3 I owned an 808.2 for about a year. I thought I would start by giving my impressions on what I hear with the 808.3. My listening is from an 808.3 to an 861v4 with all analog speakers. I do all of my music listening using 7.1 Trifield.
The 808.2 replaced my long time CD transport, the 800. The 808.2 was a benchmark product in my system. The apodizing filter was the key in its ability to extract the music and leave the digital artifacts out of recordings. In comparison, CDs though the 800 sounded like really good digital but through the 808.2 they sounded like really good music. A short description of the difference but it really was that profound to me. I was happy enough with the 808.2 I was not looking to replace it. I was intrigued, however, by claims the 808.3 was a bigger difference than the 808.2 was. Meridian earned a lot of credibility with me based on 808.2 sonics so I took the plunge.
The 808.3 builds on the 808.2 with two items of particular note. First, the sense of the space the music was recorded in is, and I never use this term lightly, an order of magnitude better. Find a recording with a really large recorded space and it appears you are listening to all of it, front to back and side to side. Good recordings that have always had a clarity or transparency to them have had the digital artifacts reduced to the point that the true recorded space is readily apparent. The sense that you are listening to the real ambiance and not room, equipment or digital artifacts is spooky.
Secondly is the space between performers and instruments in the soundstage. The 808.2 was noteworthy in that everything in the sound field started to get it own space and was more distinctly placed in the sound field in comparison to the 800. With the 808.3, everything in the sound field has its own space and is locked down precisely within in. Its like the space between everything is bigger but not exaggerated and more precise at the same time. Here, I hear a sound field that is utterly natural and believable. Front to back and side to side.
I could go on and I will later. What I hear are differences so profound that once heard, I would never want to be without them again. No going back differences. The kind of differences that connect you with your music like you have not been connected before. The kind of differences that time just melts away when listening to. You are listening to music stripped of enough digital artifacts that the advantages of digital really shine and the music flows through like never before. Sublime."
"I thought I should start a thread as I am an 808.3 owner and have been for going on three weeks now. Prior to owning the 808.3 I owned an 808.2 for about a year. I thought I would start by giving my impressions on what I hear with the 808.3. My listening is from an 808.3 to an 861v4 with all analog speakers. I do all of my music listening using 7.1 Trifield.
The 808.2 replaced my long time CD transport, the 800. The 808.2 was a benchmark product in my system. The apodizing filter was the key in its ability to extract the music and leave the digital artifacts out of recordings. In comparison, CDs though the 800 sounded like really good digital but through the 808.2 they sounded like really good music. A short description of the difference but it really was that profound to me. I was happy enough with the 808.2 I was not looking to replace it. I was intrigued, however, by claims the 808.3 was a bigger difference than the 808.2 was. Meridian earned a lot of credibility with me based on 808.2 sonics so I took the plunge.
The 808.3 builds on the 808.2 with two items of particular note. First, the sense of the space the music was recorded in is, and I never use this term lightly, an order of magnitude better. Find a recording with a really large recorded space and it appears you are listening to all of it, front to back and side to side. Good recordings that have always had a clarity or transparency to them have had the digital artifacts reduced to the point that the true recorded space is readily apparent. The sense that you are listening to the real ambiance and not room, equipment or digital artifacts is spooky.
Secondly is the space between performers and instruments in the soundstage. The 808.2 was noteworthy in that everything in the sound field started to get it own space and was more distinctly placed in the sound field in comparison to the 800. With the 808.3, everything in the sound field has its own space and is locked down precisely within in. Its like the space between everything is bigger but not exaggerated and more precise at the same time. Here, I hear a sound field that is utterly natural and believable. Front to back and side to side.
I could go on and I will later. What I hear are differences so profound that once heard, I would never want to be without them again. No going back differences. The kind of differences that connect you with your music like you have not been connected before. The kind of differences that time just melts away when listening to. You are listening to music stripped of enough digital artifacts that the advantages of digital really shine and the music flows through like never before. Sublime."