Lector CDP7 vs Primare CD31


I realize the chances are pretty slim, but does anyone have any experiance with these players? I currently have the Primare CD21, with Pre30, and Onix Strata speakers, powered by a McIntosh MC275.

Any thoughts/impressions would be appreciated.

Thank you,

Tony
tonydec
There are two PCM-1704 BB 24 bit DAC's (with indipendent board pcb for real jitter reduction)

If you dig on the website, there is a pdf with a picture of the Mk II DAC board showing the two BB PCM-63 DACs. These were replaced with PCM-1704's in the MkIII.

They also have special power supplies to the DAC's;
By two double voltage regulator and separate plug-in board as isolated ground loop for reducing ground jitter
They would only need 4 if the unit were balanced.
Do yourself a favor and save yourself a big headache and forget the Lector and Primare and buy a Prima Luna Prologue-8 all tube CD player. It will bury the Lector and
Primare. For the price of $3K, it is an absolute steal delivering a performance level to die for, that is normally
from player's $10K or over. Stereophile went nuts over the
Prima Luna and gave it an "A" rating.
Thank you for the replies.

Audiozen, I have considered the Primaluna, but that seems to come up for sale used even less than the Primare or Lector, which isn't very often.
buy a Prima Luna Prologue-8 all tube CD player. It will bury the Lector and Primare
Not so sure about that...read the whole review and be careful with system matching. If you are still upgrading, using the Prima Luna may limit some of your preamp choices down the road. Here is JA's summary of the measurements.....
Summing up the PrimaLuna ProLogue Eight's measured performance is difficult, as some of the things it does wrong, such as the increasing distortion at levels above –10dBFS, will not be that audible with typical music—a distorted snare-drum peak sounds the same as a clean one. But I was concerned about the effect of the transformer-radiated hum. I was also bothered by the very high output impedance at low frequencies, which will make system matching more difficult than usual.— JA
In fairness, they did generally like the sound, and thought an upgraded op-amp - Super I/V board ($235) - further improved things.