semente Posted May 27, 2017 Share Posted May 27, 2017 I have been unsuccessfully searching for a list of high-performance* commercial DACs that allow user to bypass digital filtering (NOS), leaving that task to a software music player such as HQ Player. It would be interesting if we could compile such a list in this thread. * - no TDA1543-based DACs please, only equipment that can take 24bit and sampling rates above 176.4/192kHz. "Science draws the wave, poetry fills it with water" Teixeira de Pascoaes HQ Player Desktop/ Mac mini → HQ Player NAA/ CuBox-i → Intona 7054 → RME ADI-2 DAC FS Link to comment
Popular Post semente Posted May 27, 2017 Author Popular Post Share Posted May 27, 2017 I know that the following qualify: - Phasure NOS1 DAC - Teac UD-501 and UD-503 How about the Lampizators? audiventory and tmtomh 2 "Science draws the wave, poetry fills it with water" Teixeira de Pascoaes HQ Player Desktop/ Mac mini → HQ Player NAA/ CuBox-i → Intona 7054 → RME ADI-2 DAC FS Link to comment
trappy Posted May 27, 2017 Share Posted May 27, 2017 Aqua DACs all avoid it, I think, no? Mac Mini (+Tidal +Roon) -> WiFi -> Lyngdorf TDAI1120 ->JM Reynaud Lucia (Tellurium Q Black v2) Link to comment
elcorso Posted May 27, 2017 Share Posted May 27, 2017 5 hours ago, semente said: I know that the following qualify: - Phasure NOS1 DAC - Teac UD-501 and UD-503 How about the Lampizators? Lampizator too. Roch semente 1 Link to comment
semente Posted May 27, 2017 Author Share Posted May 27, 2017 1 hour ago, trappy said: Aqua DACs all avoid it, I think, no? I'll check, cheers. "Science draws the wave, poetry fills it with water" Teixeira de Pascoaes HQ Player Desktop/ Mac mini → HQ Player NAA/ CuBox-i → Intona 7054 → RME ADI-2 DAC FS Link to comment
Popular Post jabbr Posted May 27, 2017 Popular Post Share Posted May 27, 2017 I'm pretty sure that with the correct settings, the iFi iDSD Micro bypasses input filtering. semente and buonassi 2 Custom room treatments for headphone users. Link to comment
rikhav Posted May 27, 2017 Share Posted May 27, 2017 Sorry for being off topic but I always assumed that if one sends a stream of max bit rate a dac supports, it automatically avoids digital filtering by a dac For example I have a burson conductor which supports maximum bit rate of 192 khz, so if send a stream of 176 or 192 khz from my PC the filtering of dac is automatically bypassed Someone please let me know if this right or I am completely wrong Link to comment
Popular Post Jud Posted May 27, 2017 Popular Post Share Posted May 27, 2017 53 minutes ago, rikhav said: Sorry for being off topic but I always assumed that if one sends a stream of max bit rate a dac supports, it automatically avoids digital filtering by a dac For example I have a burson conductor which supports maximum bit rate of 192 khz, so if send a stream of 176 or 192 khz from my PC the filtering of dac is automatically bypassed Someone please let me know if this right or I am completely wrong Not always. Typical internal rates are 352.8/384KHz, so a DAC that accepts 176.4/192 max is often upsampling. buonassi and semente 2 One never knows, do one? - Fats Waller The fairest thing we can experience is the mysterious. It is the fundamental emotion which stands at the cradle of true art and true science. - Einstein Computer, Audirvana -> optical Ethernet to Fitlet3 -> Fibbr Alpha Optical USB -> iFi NEO iDSD DAC -> Apollon Audio 1ET400A Mini (Purifi based) -> Vandersteen 3A Signature. Link to comment
Jud Posted May 27, 2017 Share Posted May 27, 2017 1 hour ago, jabbr said: I'm pretty sure that with the correct settings, the iFi iDSD Micro bypasses input filtering. It applies its modulator, I think (whichever of the three available you select). But if you've already used a software modulator, I don't know how much is left to do. One never knows, do one? - Fats Waller The fairest thing we can experience is the mysterious. It is the fundamental emotion which stands at the cradle of true art and true science. - Einstein Computer, Audirvana -> optical Ethernet to Fitlet3 -> Fibbr Alpha Optical USB -> iFi NEO iDSD DAC -> Apollon Audio 1ET400A Mini (Purifi based) -> Vandersteen 3A Signature. Link to comment
beautox Posted May 27, 2017 Share Posted May 27, 2017 Audio-GD master 7. Can switch between nos, 2x, 4x and 8x oversampling semente 1 Director Mad Scientist Audio Ltd. Link to comment
Norton Posted May 28, 2017 Share Posted May 28, 2017 Re the title of this thread, I thought that oversampling and filtering were two different things? So just because a DAC is not applying oversampling, it doesn't necessarily mean no filtering is applied? Link to comment
rikhav Posted May 28, 2017 Share Posted May 28, 2017 6 hours ago, Norton said: Re the title of this thread, I thought that oversampling and filtering were two different things? So just because a DAC is not applying oversampling, it doesn't necessarily mean no filtering is applied? Hi , even I am not sure about it and never got a clear answer for that. Maybe someone who has gone through many dacs or is from the industry itself can clear this doubt for us 6 hours ago, Norton said: Link to comment
Popular Post Jud Posted May 28, 2017 Popular Post Share Posted May 28, 2017 6 hours ago, Norton said: Re the title of this thread, I thought that oversampling and filtering were two different things? So just because a DAC is not applying oversampling, it doesn't necessarily mean no filtering is applied? Most NOS DACs have components that serve as an analog low pass filter in order to do the reconstruction of the digital bitstream to analog music. With Redbook input they thus reproduce the situation with the very earliest CD players, whose intermodulation distortion levels led to the use of the phrase "digital sound" in a negative way. Soon afterward, even before the advent of the DAC as a separate piece of equipment, 8x oversampling chips became typical in order to significantly reduce intermodulation distortion. Edit: If oversampling is applied, filtering is necessary to avoid aliasing and consequent harmonic and intermodulation distortion. semente, rikhav, buonassi and 1 other 4 One never knows, do one? - Fats Waller The fairest thing we can experience is the mysterious. It is the fundamental emotion which stands at the cradle of true art and true science. - Einstein Computer, Audirvana -> optical Ethernet to Fitlet3 -> Fibbr Alpha Optical USB -> iFi NEO iDSD DAC -> Apollon Audio 1ET400A Mini (Purifi based) -> Vandersteen 3A Signature. Link to comment
rikhav Posted May 28, 2017 Share Posted May 28, 2017 Hi Judy Then the question is if we feed a digital signal which is the max rate a dac can go, then will the dac still apply filtering ? Link to comment
Popular Post Jud Posted May 28, 2017 Popular Post Share Posted May 28, 2017 1 hour ago, rikhav said: Hi Judy Then the question is if we feed a digital signal which is the max rate a dac can go, then will the dac still apply filtering ? No, but there are lots of situations where this doesn't happen. Nothing with an ESS DAC chip will allow this, and many others aren't set up to permit it either. That I assume is why semente started the thread, to find those DACs that do allow it. rikhav and semente 2 One never knows, do one? - Fats Waller The fairest thing we can experience is the mysterious. It is the fundamental emotion which stands at the cradle of true art and true science. - Einstein Computer, Audirvana -> optical Ethernet to Fitlet3 -> Fibbr Alpha Optical USB -> iFi NEO iDSD DAC -> Apollon Audio 1ET400A Mini (Purifi based) -> Vandersteen 3A Signature. Link to comment
jabbr Posted May 28, 2017 Share Posted May 28, 2017 This is my understanding: (I'm going to limit the discussion to DSD in this post and can discuss PCM separately if desired -- just ask) The "sound" is contained in the digital recording. The goal of the reproduction system (DAC + Amp + Speakers) is to accurately product the "sound". During the playback process, the "sound" is mixed with "noise". In a DSD (SDM) bitstream, the "sound" is directly contained in the "analogue" part of the bitstream, the "noise" is contained in the "digital" clock that is used to transport the stream from one place to another. The function of the DAC is to separate the analogue sound from the digital noise. This is really really simple, so if you don't understand what I've written above, go back and reread, because understanding this is essential to understanding the process. The last sentence, in particular, accurately and specifically describes the function of the DAC. In DSD/SDM the digital noise is contained in the carrier clock (BCLK) as well as its harmonics. The BCLK is necessary to interface the analogue signal with the digital system and the goal of the DAC is to remove all vestiges of the BCLK from the analogue signal without disturbing the signal itself. This where upsampling and filters come into play. Let's say we allow everything to pass including the carrier BCLK -- we can't hear it right? Speakers can't reproduce it right? What's the big deal? That's where intermodulation distortion comes in: high frequency noise interacts with the electronics to produce measurable, audible and very harsh sounding distortion in the audible band. One might consider a "brickwall" filter which would allow the analogue signal to pass and cut off everything above what we define as either 44 kHz or 96 kHz or whatever we define as the upper limit of the analogue signal we want. Well it turns out that these "brickwall" filters also have distortion that extends below the cutoff frequency: the brickwall filters aren't perfect. So a much much better idea is to use a gentle filter at the corner frequency but in order to get the gentle filter to effectively filter out the digital noise we need to "noise shape" which is where the upsampling comes into place: the upsampling increases the frequency of the digital carrier clock (BCLK) thus increasing the frequency separation between the analogue signal and the digital noise and thus improving the ability of the gentle filter to remove the noise. Viola' Now 99% of PCM starts out as SDM/DSD and ends up as SDM/DSD to the same argument applies with the added complexity of where, when and how to convert between SDM and PCM. semente 1 Custom room treatments for headphone users. Link to comment
jabbr Posted May 28, 2017 Share Posted May 28, 2017 In light of above, no DAC eschews output filtering Typically if a DAC accepts DSD256,512 its going to be very difficult to realtime filter that signal! so I'd assume there's no input filtering, but if there is, someones done a great engineering job Any DAC that does input upsampling does input filtering. Custom room treatments for headphone users. Link to comment
audiventory Posted May 28, 2017 Share Posted May 28, 2017 2 minutes ago, jabbr said: In light of above, no DAC eschews output filtering Typically if a DAC accepts DSD256,512 its going to be very difficult to realtime filter that signal! so I'd assume there's no input filtering, but if there is, someones done a great engineering job Any DAC that does input upsampling does input filtering. DSD256 and above allow more effective use analog filter. Because, noise pushed more far, than for DSD64/128. I suppose any DSD DAC have no digital filter, because filtering in DSD form is impossible. However, theoretically, there may be applied oversampling DSD for better work with analog filter. semente 1 AuI ConverteR 48x44 - HD audio converter/optimizer for DAC of high resolution files ISO, DSF, DFF (1-bit/D64/128/256/512/1024), wav, flac, aiff, alac, safe CD ripper to PCM/DSF, Seamless Album Conversion, AIFF, WAV, FLAC, DSF metadata editor, Mac & WindowsOffline conversion save energy and nature Link to comment
mansr Posted May 28, 2017 Share Posted May 28, 2017 44 minutes ago, jabbr said: This is my understanding: (I'm going to limit the discussion to DSD in this post and can discuss PCM separately if desired -- just ask) The "sound" is contained in the digital recording. The goal of the reproduction system (DAC + Amp + Speakers) is to accurately product the "sound". During the playback process, the "sound" is mixed with "noise". In a DSD (SDM) bitstream, the "sound" is directly contained in the "analogue" part of the bitstream, the "noise" is contained in the "digital" clock that is used to transport the stream from one place to another. The function of the DAC is to separate the analogue sound from the digital noise. This is really really simple, so if you don't understand what I've written above, go back and reread, because understanding this is essential to understanding the process. The last sentence, in particular, accurately and specifically describes the function of the DAC. In DSD/SDM the digital noise is contained in the carrier clock (BCLK) as well as its harmonics. The BCLK is necessary to interface the analogue signal with the digital system and the goal of the DAC is to remove all vestiges of the BCLK from the analogue signal without disturbing the signal itself. This where upsampling and filters come into play. Let's say we allow everything to pass including the carrier BCLK -- we can't hear it right? Speakers can't reproduce it right? What's the big deal? That's where intermodulation distortion comes in: high frequency noise interacts with the electronics to produce measurable, audible and very harsh sounding distortion in the audible band. One might consider a "brickwall" filter which would allow the analogue signal to pass and cut off everything above what we define as either 44 kHz or 96 kHz or whatever we define as the upper limit of the analogue signal we want. Well it turns out that these "brickwall" filters also have distortion that extends below the cutoff frequency: the brickwall filters aren't perfect. So a much much better idea is to use a gentle filter at the corner frequency but in order to get the gentle filter to effectively filter out the digital noise we need to "noise shape" which is where the upsampling comes into place: the upsampling increases the frequency of the digital carrier clock (BCLK) thus increasing the frequency separation between the analogue signal and the digital noise and thus improving the ability of the gentle filter to remove the noise. Viola' Now 99% of PCM starts out as SDM/DSD and ends up as SDM/DSD to the same argument applies with the added complexity of where, when and how to convert between SDM and PCM. Sorry, but that makes no sense whatsoever. I suggest you study the maths involved properly before trying to explain things. orresearch 1 Link to comment
mansr Posted May 28, 2017 Share Posted May 28, 2017 18 minutes ago, jabbr said: Typically if a DAC accepts DSD256,512 its going to be very difficult to realtime filter that signal! so I'd assume there's no input filtering, but if there is, someones done a great engineering job You mean like ESS and AKM DACs do? Link to comment
Popular Post mansr Posted May 28, 2017 Popular Post Share Posted May 28, 2017 16 hours ago, Jud said: 18 hours ago, jabbr said: I'm pretty sure that with the correct settings, the iFi iDSD Micro bypasses input filtering. It applies its modulator, I think (whichever of the three available you select). But if you've already used a software modulator, I don't know how much is left to do. The DAC chip (TI DSD1793) upsamples internally to 384 kHz. If the input sample rate is lower, a switch offers three choices: sharp or slow rolloff internal filter (both linear phase, the "minimum phase" label is a lie), or bypass ("bit-perfect") where the input samples are repeated (zero-order hold) by the microcontroller to achieve the DAC's native rate. With DSD input, the filter switch selects which built-in analogue filter to use. There is no digital processing of DSD data. orresearch and semente 2 Link to comment
jabbr Posted May 28, 2017 Share Posted May 28, 2017 30 minutes ago, mansr said: Sorry, but that makes no sense whatsoever. I suggest you study the maths involved properly before trying to explain things. This is intended to be a simple natural English language explanation for people who speak English not a mathematical explanation for people who speak math. Naturally the English language is subject to human interpretation but you might go back and learn how to communicate with humans. Custom room treatments for headphone users. Link to comment
mansr Posted May 28, 2017 Share Posted May 28, 2017 6 minutes ago, jabbr said: This is intended to be a simple natural English language explanation for people who speak English not a mathematical explanation for people who speak math. It's still wrong in more ways than I can count. Link to comment
jabbr Posted May 28, 2017 Share Posted May 28, 2017 1 hour ago, jabbr said: The function of the DAC is to separate the analogue sound from the digital noise. This could be difficult because you don't speak natural English as a primary language and I understand that you are having trouble counting the ways it is wrong so let's start with a simple sentence. This is an English language sentence. Do you understand? Do you agree? Do you need it spelled out? Custom room treatments for headphone users. Link to comment
rikhav Posted May 28, 2017 Share Posted May 28, 2017 Guys Why fight? It gets us nowhere Link to comment
Recommended Posts
Posted by semente,
This is the current list as of September 02, 2024
Recommended by The Computer Audiophile
0 reactions
Go to this post
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 accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now