New Transport Approach


With never-ending advances in technology and tumbling prices, I wonder if any high-end audio CD player manufacturer is considering an approach such as this - populate the player with 700 megabytes of RAM and pre-read the whole CD into RAM. We know this is completely reliable (or else our beloved MS Office wouldn't work). Then the whole transport system could be shut down, eliminating any concerns about mechanical or electrical noise, and the "CD" could be played back straight from RAM through the DAC. It would seem like this would reduce or eliminate jitter completely. There would be an "initialization" time penalty, but I would think for the high-end market, that wouldn't be a huge deal. Any thoughts? -Kirk
kthomas

Showing 1 response by blueswan

Kirk, I like your suggestion. With the entire disc in RAM, any number of processing algorithms and could be applied and perhaps a substantial decrease in jitter when the signal is clocked out to the DAC directly. There would also be instantaneous track and search capabilites. But, alas we live in a 'I gotta have it right now' world and any buffering induced delay is not likely to be acceptable to the general population. Perhaps the audiophile community could support such a player. The huge advances in RAM the last 5 years may make this a possibilty. In the meantime, I like the multiple DAC approach of Accuphase in the DP-75V, but few of us can shell out its $11k price tag.

By the way, how long a delay are we talking about? Does anyone know how long it would take to read 700 meg to RAM from a CD-ROM on the best available disc drives?