I applaud dCS to bring Ring DAC based technology to a affordable price point.
It was a lot cheaper in the ARCAM CD player though. :)
What DAC's have you auditioned recently to compare, and what do you feel was different?
Best,
E
Stereophile mistakenly writes Mytek Review as dCS
So I have heard both through a Simaudio 330A and there is a vast difference IMO. Whether its worth the vast difference in price is really in the "ear of the beholder" ... One thing to consider if you have the choice is that the Bartok DAC firmware update capabilities that should give it room to last given how quickly DACs are evolving. That said the Brooklyn is hard to beat for the money ! |
Presented, without comment: Listening It was not hard to hear a difference between the Mytek and dCS DACs, although that difference was subtle enough that I doubt I would have noticed it if I had not had the ability to switch rapidly back and forth, although the effects of the difference could still have made themselves known over time.
After I’d finished with my listening, dCS alerted me to a possible error in my methodology: Grouped zones in Roon may not be bit-perfect. If the two DACs aren’t both receiving the same, unaltered data, the test is invalid. But in my case, the data apparently were bit-perfect: When I played an MQA file through each of two grouped zones to both MQA-enabled DACs, both indicated that they were decoding MQA, which, according to both Roon and MQA experts I talked to, is a clear indication of bit-perfect playback. Indeed, dCS writes in the Bartók manual, "MQA decoding is not possible if the original MQA data has been changed." Enno Vandermeer, Roon’s CEO, told me via Facebook Messenger: "It’s certainly possible" to get bit-perfect playback in grouped zones, "especially on a stable network, We just can’t guarantee that the slave zone will be bit-perfect." |
+1 williamdc34 posts10-07-2019 11:23amWhen I read that review, I thought of the expression "damning with faint praise". |