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Subwoofers
* It may have been the liquor talking, but
Arny Krueger wrote: "Audio Empire" wrote in message On Sun, 27 Feb 2011 05:12:40 -0800, Arny Krueger wrote (in article ): "Audio Empire" wrote in message On Fri, 25 Feb 2011 04:52:40 -0800, Arny Krueger wrote (in article ): "Rockinghorse Winner" wrote in message Uh, ok. I would like a nice sub, but first I need to upgrade my CD player. Upgrade or replace? If it sounds bad, then its almost certainly broken. Tacking a DAC onto a broken CD player is like a house built on shifting sand. If the player breaks the rest of the way, then the money invested in the DAC is good money thrown after bad. He didn't say that his current CD player sounds bad. He said it sounded a little soft for his taste. Ah, the mythology of good players that sound bad rides again! TASTES, Mr. Kruger. Taste presumes relevant differences. Let's say that you met someone who would walk up to a case of bottled water and carefully inspectes each (identical) bottle, and then pick one claiming that it tasted better than the rest. Let's say that someone would only drink a given brand of bottled water in a certain size? Most of us would say that someone is acting pretty strange - sort of like Mr. Monk the detective on TV. Some people like different things in the way their systems sound. The key parameter here is the easily disproven idea that all CD players have a characteristic sound. One person might prefer "soft" while another might prefer that their system sound a bit "brighter". Just because one player sounds soft and another sounds bright doesn't mean that either one of them is defective, however. If they sound different than at least one has failed to be sonically transparent. Any CD player that fails to be sonically transparent is either broken now or started out that way. I'm not one to try on different speaker cables searching for the right one, because there are math-based reasons why this is futile. However, a CD player contains so many different components and varying circuits in both the digital and analog sections, that it would be unreasonable to suppose that there would NOT be differences in the analog signal that comes out of them. If the transport is working correctly, then an outboard DAC is a very reasonable way to "upgrade" it. Ah, the mythology of good DACs that sound bad is back to haunt us. Who said anything about something sounding bad? Any DAC that fails to be sonically transparent is either broken now or started out that way. You might like the taste of brussels sprouts, and I might not. That presumes that good DACs sound can possibly sound different from each other. They can't. The mission of a DAC is to be sonically transparent. We all know that good vegetables can taste different, even bussels sprouts from the same plant depending how ripe they are when they are picked. Completely different thing. *R* *H* -- Powered by Linux |/ 2.6.32.26-175 Fedora 12 "No spyware. No viruses. No nags." |/ 2.6.31.12-0.2 OpenSUSE 11.2 http://www.jamendo.com |/ "Preach the gospel always; when necessary use words." St. Francis |
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