USB yet again


For a few years I have had an Intona Isolator with Oyaide Continental 5S upstream and Intona Reference downstream connecting Streamer and DAC. Given the Strong benefit of filters on the upstream Ethernet connection I added a LHY Audio USB 3.0 purifier with a Grey Knights power cable. The tightening of the transfer and resultant SQ was remarkable despite having used superior cables before.

While USB remains a compromised transfer format, asynchronous USB is the only protocol synchronising the server’s and dac’s clocks unless both have master clock connections. AES/EBU may have better noise rejection but has imbedded clock signal,SPDif is outdated as well as speed constrained and I2S not standardised. Hopefully the industry comes up with a better solution. It is interesting that there seems to emerge a trend to combine server and dac: one wonders why?

antigrunge2

Showing 2 responses by danager

Maybe I don’t know what an ethernet based DAC is??? Isn’t it just converting the ethernet stream to a protocol like I2S? There isn’t a cable or a connector as it can be wired directly but wouldn’t it be prone to have all the same issues as a separate processor without the convivence of upgrading the source?

The Peachtree GaN 1 Beta eliminates the DAC by only accepting a COAX input but that’s not ethernet either???

Cheers

Ted Smith, PS Audio DirectStream DAC inventor uses / used USB on the original DirectStream DAC (there’s a new version now with galvanic isolation). Ted believed that the biggest issue with USB is the noise from the 5V power generated by the source. Unfortunately the DAC requires the 5V to be recognized but an inexpensive work around is available. A powered USB 2.0 hub and a power blocker adapter removes the computer’ 5V allowing the hub provides its own.

My experience is that it improved the sound quite a bit. I2S into the latest version of the DirectStream is probably better but defiantly not what I would call an inexpensive upgrade.