Solutions for converting vinyl to 256 DSD?


Wondering if anyone has gone the route of converting vinyl to 256 DSD and if so what A-D converter and software they used? I'd like to do this with my Direct to Disc, old RCA and Mercury recordings as a backup solution.

davide256

I purchased a Tascam DA-3000 and never looked back. Very easy & very flexible as far as options. ONLY thing it does not work with 11.2 dsd but regardless I used 5.6 and works amazing

@snowdog57 thanks, there's a germ of an idea there. I'd prefer to do native DSD
conversion but I would consider doing PGGB DSD up-sampling if the source files were HiRes. The Art 
USB Phono Plus is limited to 48/16, I'll look around for options that do 192/24 A-D conversion with RIAA equalization

@philgo01 There's an application called Music Media Helper which I normally use
to extract and tag audio from blue ray audio discs, easy enough to use it to tag PCM files before PGGB up sampling (which retains the tags).  

Native DSD is recommending a program called Tag and Rename                                                        

 

 

I also have a DA-3000 and can vouch for its ease of use and quality of transcription.  It has two quirks you should be aware of.  First, it only supports a maximum storage medium size of 64GB on USB drives and 32GB on SD cards.  Second, you will have to manually index tracks.  The auto-index by 2 seconds of silence isn’t as reliable as you might like and can’t handle transitional tracks at all.  The index by time inserts an annoying "beep" to signal the interval and that can’t be defeated.  Note the manual index can be done after the fact or during playback via the remote.  FWIW, I usually index after the fact and use an external keyboard to input track data.

Good luck & happy listening!

I use a Prism Sound Lyra 2 for ADC. I’m a DJ and rip countless records to WAV weekly, and although this isn’t a snake-oil hifi priced item but rather a pro-audio studio unit, as long as the rest of the upstream chain is accurate and not too voiced, the Lyra has gorgeous conversion. Never thought about it but you could probably record to DSD with an additional disc burner.

+1 @yoyoyaya I think the RME Pro Audio units are worth considering. They have very high stability clocks and very linear ADC performance.