Jump to content
IGNORED

Direct Attach Cable Thread


Recommended Posts

Main System: QNAP TS-451+ > Silent Angel Bonn N8 > Sonore opticalModule Deluxe v2 > Corning SMF with Finisar FTLF1318P3BTL SFPs > Uptone EtherREGEN > exaSound PlayPoint and e32 Mk-II DAC > Meitner MTR-101 Plus monoblocks > Bamberg S5-MTM sealed standmount speakers. Crown XLi 1500 powering AV123 Rocket UFW10 stereo subwoofers. Upgraded power on all switches, renderer and DAC. Furutech and Audio Sensibility ethernet cables, Cardas Neutral Ref analogue cables. iFi Audio AC iPurifer, iFi Supanova, Furman PF-15i & PST-8, power conditioners.

 

Link to comment
6 hours ago, audiobomber said:

Note that this link may glitch, goes to the post below, so you may need to scroll up one post. Chris is aware.

Main System: QNAP TS-451+ > Silent Angel Bonn N8 > Sonore opticalModule Deluxe v2 > Corning SMF with Finisar FTLF1318P3BTL SFPs > Uptone EtherREGEN > exaSound PlayPoint and e32 Mk-II DAC > Meitner MTR-101 Plus monoblocks > Bamberg S5-MTM sealed standmount speakers. Crown XLi 1500 powering AV123 Rocket UFW10 stereo subwoofers. Upgraded power on all switches, renderer and DAC. Furutech and Audio Sensibility ethernet cables, Cardas Neutral Ref analogue cables. iFi Audio AC iPurifer, iFi Supanova, Furman PF-15i & PST-8, power conditioners.

 

Link to comment
9 hours ago, Superdad said:

Despite the construction of these cables being highly standardized (100-Ohm pairs mandatory, copper wire, PTFE dielectric, and shielding), that has not prevented one company from recently introducing a ridiculously priced $1,000 “audiophile” version with silver-plated wire. :S

That's exactly my point. Copper cables have undergone numerous iterations in the audio world, available at various price points and a range of SQ. Could it be the same for DAC cables? For example, a silver-plated DAC cable can also be found as a budget version on Amazon for $39.95.(Silver-coated copper wire Passive Direct Attach Copper Twinax Cable).

The two examples I mentioned in my earlier post might be exceptions, but when you take a look at both it seems that these cables are quite different and not standardized. This makes comparisons worthwhile if it leads to noticeable audible differences.  Consistency between different lengths of the same brand, yes. But I’m afraid we find ourselves in the same situation again with different brands. I would indeed recommend to make a purchase only when you know what the DAC cable is made of (is it a standardised type?) or if you trust the ears of the person recommending it :S. Enjoy!

 

PS. feel free to transfer this post to the new thread by @audiobomber

Link to comment
2 hours ago, di-fi said:

That's exactly my point. Copper cables have undergone numerous iterations in the audio world, available at various price points and a range of SQ. Could it be the same for DAC cables? For example, a silver-plated DAC cable can also be found as a budget version on Amazon for $39.95.(Silver-coated copper wire Passive Direct Attach Copper Twinax Cable).

 

While we truly doubt that either silver-plating or wire gauge are going to make a difference in SFP DAC cable performance, the dielectric used to insulate each wire in the two pairs very definitely matters. Look for Teflon, PTFE, or foamed-Teflon.

 

 

2 hours ago, di-fi said:

PS. feel free to transfer this post to the new thread by @audiobomber

 

I'd like to move your post and the two that follow it, but have moderator privileges/power only in threads here in the UpTone sponsored forum area. Can't move posts to public forum threads.

Link to comment
8 hours ago, di-fi said:

That's exactly my point. Copper cables have undergone numerous iterations in the audio world, available at various price points and a range of SQ. Could it be the same for DAC cables? For example, a silver-plated DAC cable can also be found as a budget version on Amazon for $39.95.(Silver-coated copper wire Passive Direct Attach Copper Twinax Cable).

The two examples I mentioned in my earlier post might be exceptions, but when you take a look at both it seems that these cables are quite different and not standardized. This makes comparisons worthwhile if it leads to noticeable audible differences.  Consistency between different lengths of the same brand, yes. But I’m afraid we find ourselves in the same situation again with different brands. I would indeed recommend to make a purchase only when you know what the DAC cable is made of (is it a standardised type?) or if you trust the ears of the person recommending it :S. Enjoy!

 

PS. feel free to transfer this post to the new thread by @audiobomber

@Superdad Please explane why passive DAC cables for streaming is better, compered to isolation via optic fiber. All regards.

Link to comment
13 minutes ago, i.deklein said:

@Superdad Please explane why passive DAC cables for streaming is better, compered to isolation via optic fiber. All regards.


Hi:

I did explain in detail—a couple of pages back—how, in the usage context of connection between the highly isolated (clock/data/power) domain of one side of an EtherREGEN and an endpoint with SFP cage, a Direct Attach Cable can perform better, with less induced ground-plane noise and less added jitter.

 

But for other use cases—including the network feed to an EtherREGEN—optical transceivers and the isolation from leakage currents they provide will still be better than a DAC cable connection.

 

Please see here:

 

Link to comment
1 hour ago, TRHH said:

If you want to reduce potential Electromagnetic interference (EMI) noise in your setup, than DAC would not be the best solution.


Usage contact is important. Elsewhere I wrote:

In the usage context of connection between the highly isolated (clock/data/power) domain of one side of an EtherREGEN and an endpoint with SFP cage, a Direct Attach Cable can perform better, with less induced ground-plane noise and less added jitter.

 

But for other use cases—including the network feed to an EtherREGEN—optical transceivers and the isolation from leakage currents they provide will still be better than a DAC cable connection.


I went a bit more in-depth beginning with some posts here:


By the way, I’m not very fond of using generic generalized terms such as EMI. I prefer to discuss the actual unwanted electrical sources, the ways they propagate, and how they actually impact the digital audio endpoint (i.e. the D/A converter’s master clock pin via ground-plane noise).

Link to comment
27 minutes ago, Superdad said:

I prefer to discuss the actual unwanted electrical sources, the ways they propagate, and how they actually impact the digital audio endpoint (i.e. the D/A converter’s master clock pin via ground-plane noise).

 

Than there is a lot to cover: Mode conversion, common mode noise and EMI.

 

Torben

Link to comment
Quote

A Direct Attach Copper cable or a “DAC cable” is a twinax copper cable terminated with SFP connectors that connects directly the SFP ports (or line cards) within active equipment, such as switches, routers, servers or data storage devices, in a data network. 

For audio a DAC cable is typically used as the last connection to the endpoint.  The length should not exceed 7m. and does not have a significant impact on SQ, however there other variables in the composition of a DAC cable that could impact sound. 
 

Copper cables have undergone numerous iterations in the audio world, available at various price points and a range of SQ. Could it be the same for DAC cables? For example, a silver-plated DAC cable can also be found as a budget version on Amazon for $39.95.(Silver-coated copper wire Passive Direct Attach Copper Twinax Cable).

 

The two examples I mentioned in my earlier post might be exceptions, but when you take a look at both it seems that these cables are quite different and not standardized. This makes comparisons worthwhile if it leads to noticeable audible differences.  

 

Consistency between different lengths of the same brand, yes. But I’m afraid we find ourselves in the same situation again with different brands. I would indeed recommend to make a purchase only when you know what the DAC cable is made of (is it a standardised type?) or if you trust the ears of the person recommending it :S. Enjoy!

Link to comment
7 hours ago, Superdad said:

Usage contact is important. Elsewhere I wrote:

 

In the usage context of connection between the highly isolated (clock/data/power) domain of one side of an EtherREGEN and an endpoint with SFP cage, a Direct Attach Cable can perform better, with less induced ground-plane noise and less added jitter.

I expect that even without the isolation provided by an ER, a DAC cable would be acceptable in a system where the two end devices are grounded to the same point, such that no ground current would flow between them through the DAC cable.

Main System: QNAP TS-451+ > Silent Angel Bonn N8 > Sonore opticalModule Deluxe v2 > Corning SMF with Finisar FTLF1318P3BTL SFPs > Uptone EtherREGEN > exaSound PlayPoint and e32 Mk-II DAC > Meitner MTR-101 Plus monoblocks > Bamberg S5-MTM sealed standmount speakers. Crown XLi 1500 powering AV123 Rocket UFW10 stereo subwoofers. Upgraded power on all switches, renderer and DAC. Furutech and Audio Sensibility ethernet cables, Cardas Neutral Ref analogue cables. iFi Audio AC iPurifer, iFi Supanova, Furman PF-15i & PST-8, power conditioners.

 

Link to comment

From what I have gathered (please correct me), the use of a passive Direct Attach cable makes sense when everything else (EMI, RFI, Common mode, Power etc.) have already been optimized/reduced. This will most likely be at the closest, if not the final, connection to the audio endpoint. The advantage over other types of digital connection is that it uses low power and minimal electronics thereby providing least negative impact.  And it is only possible when the connection is between two SFP ports.

 

 

Link to comment
1 hour ago, alecm said:

@i.deklein

Direct Attach Cables (DAC) do not use a five-layer transmission model (PAM-5) (2,1,0,-1,-2v), as Gigabit Ethernet does for RJ45. Instead, they use LVDS to provide high-speed and reliable data transfer between devices with SFP/SFP+ ports. This significantly minimizes noise and jitter


This is very interesting and good to know. 
 

Then @Superdad or @JohnSwenson

Is there any difference in chips you decide to use in conjunction with the SFP cage ?

Does 10Gb has better specs that’s in our interest to have ? 
 

And is there a difference between the opticalRendu and ER2 in this design that may affect jitter etc when using a DAC ?

 

With using proper PS, can we forget about ground loops between at least those two devices?

 

Is it possible one way or another to measure optical connections vs fiber between those two’s, or make some predictions maybe?

(whatever we want to measure and is realistic to do). 

Link to comment
1 hour ago, SQFIRST said:

Without any doubt this will be going on! :)

 

Will be interesting to hear back what comes up.

I completely agree. In my opinion, one DAC cable can vary significantly from another, phisically I mean. I'm unsure if any audible comparisons have been done since Taiko started using the FS branded cable (maybe because few in that user group seem inclined to experiment).

 

As long as users are aware of the potential differences and possible sound quality variations between DAC cables, we can't be certain of the outcomes, can we? For instance, what impact might different shielding have? What about the connectors? I think it's important to know specifically because using this cable as the final connection should have the most influence on sound quality.

Link to comment

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now



×
×
  • Create New...