I believe my DAC is good enough. I am curious as to whether or not I can feed it a better signal than directly from the Nucleus Plus. Of note, the optical interface only accepts USB.
Streamer between Roon Nucleus Plus and DAC
Currently using my Nucleus to output via USB into a proprietary fiber optic interface that then connects to the DAC. Anything to be gained by putting a streamer in between the Nucleus and the interface? Or replacing the Nucleus with another device altogether? I do like Roon.
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@tcutter you have a fantastic DAC. I’m confused though…when you say you have usb from nucleus into some sort of a converter then fiber optic into DAC…do you actually mean optical cable? I don’t see any fiber optic inputs on MPD-8…can you be more specific? |
I too am a Roonaholic. When I first started with Roon, I had my Roon Nucleus with Sbooster LPS streaming to itself feeding a Chord Qutest via Curious USB cable. It made for an enjoyable combination. A few years later I acquired a Bricasti M5 network bridge acting as Roon endpoint, and had that feeding the Qutest via Kimber D60 Coax, and to my ears this made for a significant jump in sound quality. I then upgraded my DAC to a Rockna Wavelight, and this notched things up once again. Earlier this year I replaced my Bricasti M5 with a Hifi Rose RS130 utilized as Roon endpoint. And again enjoyed a significant boost in SQ and audio enjoyment, first via the Kimber D60, and now via Tubulus Consentus I2S cable into the Wavelight. Then last month introduced a Melco S100/2 network switch into the mix. And was able to notch things up yet again. Currently the Melco and Rose are connected via RJ45 terminated ethernet cable (Wireworld Starlight Cat 8). But both the Melco switch and Rose RS130 support fiber, and I do intend to experiment with fiber in the future. Bottom line, in my own experience, found the streamer to be a major piece of the puzzle with respect to sound quality.
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@audphile1 Playback Designs has a proprietary system that is built into some of their source devices but is also available free-standing. It accepts a USB input and converts it to an optical signal called PLINK, which uses an ST cable and connects to the DAC. It is different from toslink. Two supposed advantages are galvanic isolation and the clock in the interface is the same as the clock in the DAC. https://positive-feedback.com/reviews/hardware-reviews/playback-designs-usb-x4/ @jazzman7 May I distill your comments to, "Consider getting a better Roon-ready streamer than the Nucleus Plus"? |
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