Bricasti M5 vs Ultrarendu Advice?


Currently I am using Bricasti M5 for my network player. I was recently told that a Sonore Ultrarendu with LPS would be a noticeable improvement.  I was with the understanding the M5 was a step up from the UR.  Anyone with experience comparing these two players?  
My set up = router-fmc-opt cable-fmc-M5-Lab 12 DAC with a Sonic Transporter i5 as Roon Core

128x128tksteingraber

@mastering92 the i5 is the newest current version and the cord is Fiber Patch Cable - LC to LC OS2 10Gb/Gigabit Singlemode Jumper Duplex 9/125 LSZH Fiber Optic Cord for SMF SFP Transceiver.  Thanks

OK, one way to look at it--if you buy either the M3 or M1 the price to add a network card is $1K.  It's identical to what's in your M5, without the case.  

The entire "Rendu" line is about galvanic isolation and converting the signal coming in to an optical one, which (as opposed to so many things in this hobby) creates a difference you can actually hear.  

I have an Optical Rendu in my house with the optical module.  It's better than anything else I've had in my system which includes my Innuos Zenith MkIII and the Bricasti M3 that I demoed.  The dealer I know who sells the Ultimate Rendu claims it's the best streaming option that he has heard--better than the Innuos Statement, better than the new EMM Labs NS1 Streamer, better than anything he has heard (and he carries lots of $$$ streamers and DACS).  Maybe the Grimm beats it, but neither of us has ever heard it.

If you get a chance to demo against the Bricasti I'll bet you will find you are hearing a lot more out of the Ultimate Rendu. 

I have an UltraRendu, an OpticalRendu (with linear PSUs) and a Bricasti M5. I use the M5. I really must get around to selling the two Rendus.

For me, as a streamer, the M5 is as good as it gets. It also has AES/EBU and SPDIF, as well as USB, while the Rendus only have USB. AES/EBU sounds much better to me than USB with all of the many DACs I have used over the past few years. But even with USB, the M5 is a better unit.

yes indeed, sonore's optical rendu -- and the earlier released ultrarendu (no optical conversion) -- are not to be confused with each other