PS Audio USB DAC w/ Parasound Pre+Amp

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  • kfr01
    Member
    • Jan 2006
    • 83

    #1

    PS Audio USB DAC w/ Parasound Pre+Amp

    Just thought I'd report on some favorable synergy going on in my system (especially since things have been rather dead around here).

    I picked up this new USB DAC with balanced outputs:



    So, my electronics chain is now:

    PC -> USB -> PS Audio DAC -> XLR -> Parasound P3 -> XLR -> Parasound HCA3500.

    My system sounds better than it ever has...
    Karl
    My Chain: PC Audio (EAC + FLAC) --> USB --> PS Audio Digital Link III USB DAC --> Exodus XLR's -->
    Parasound Halo P3 --> Exodus XLR's --> Parasound HCA3500 --> Custom Exodus Audio 2641 Speakers
  • mattburk
    Senior Member
    • Feb 2003
    • 248

    #2
    Nice dac, I plan on picking one up too.Tell us more......
    www.mycstone.com
    www.coverednow.com
    www.biarenton.com

    Comment

    • bhuskins
      Senior Member
      • Aug 2003
      • 504

      #3
      Media Design carries PS Audio too...support your forum sponsor please :-) (25% off is standard on PS Audio)

      Comment

      • kfr01
        Member
        • Jan 2006
        • 83

        #4
        Brent --- reeeealllly? I did not know that. I suppose clicking on your link would have told me the same. You sell the PS Audio cables too, I assume..?

        Anyway. Subjective qualities aside, this PS Audio dac is the only serious ~$1k 192k upsampling USB dac w/ balanced outputs I know of.

        The installation and use couldn't be easier. No drivers are required, it works just like a truly plug-in-play soundcard.

        The synergy with my parasound stuff - wow. I'll spare the rest of you too much Friday night wine and music induced subjective prose, but I'll only say that there's more foot tapping here than there's been in a long time; and that's not just the wine talking. :-)
        Karl
        My Chain: PC Audio (EAC + FLAC) --> USB --> PS Audio Digital Link III USB DAC --> Exodus XLR's -->
        Parasound Halo P3 --> Exodus XLR's --> Parasound HCA3500 --> Custom Exodus Audio 2641 Speakers

        Comment

        • Chris D
          Ultra Senior Member
          • Dec 2000
          • 16875

          #5
          Sweet, man... going audiophile, though, is it really worth using ripped files as sources?
          CHRIS

          Well, we're safe for now. Thank goodness we're in a bowling alley.
          - Pleasantville

          Comment

          • bhuskins
            Senior Member
            • Aug 2003
            • 504

            #6
            It is if you're playing waves...

            Comment

            • kfr01
              Member
              • Jan 2006
              • 83

              #7
              Or FLAC. Chris, there's nothing inferior about ripped sources. The damage comes when (a) people don't know how to rip properly or (b) they use a lossy compression format.

              Properly ripped and compressed using a good lossless format, the resulting audio stream is no different from that coming off your cd player or a wave. Bit for bit, the same.

              In fact, using a good ripping software, properly setup, there is actually a -smaller- chance of errors -during- playback compared to optical disk playback (read errors, disk errors, timing errors, etc.).

              With ripped files, all of these optical read issues have been taken care of during the file ripping process, well before playback.
              Karl
              My Chain: PC Audio (EAC + FLAC) --> USB --> PS Audio Digital Link III USB DAC --> Exodus XLR's -->
              Parasound Halo P3 --> Exodus XLR's --> Parasound HCA3500 --> Custom Exodus Audio 2641 Speakers

              Comment

              • bhuskins
                Senior Member
                • Aug 2003
                • 504

                #8
                yep...

                Comment

                • r100gs
                  Senior Member
                  • May 2005
                  • 322

                  #9
                  Originally posted by kfr01
                  Or FLAC. Chris, there's nothing inferior about ripped sources. The damage comes when (a) people don't know how to rip properly or (b) they use a lossy compression format.

                  Properly ripped and compressed using a good lossless format, the resulting audio stream is no different from that coming off your cd player or a wave. Bit for bit, the same.

                  In fact, using a good ripping software, properly setup, there is actually a -smaller- chance of errors -during- playback compared to optical disk playback (read errors, disk errors, timing errors, etc.).

                  With ripped files, all of these optical read issues have been taken care of during the file ripping process, well before playback.

                  Karl, Is there any freeware you would suggest for lossless burning? I've been using WMP lossless, but it will only play on my car stereo. My reference player at home will not play it.
                  Jay

                  Comment

                  • kfr01
                    Member
                    • Jan 2006
                    • 83

                    #10
                    Rip with Exact Audio Copy (freeware) in secure mode, use accurate rip to verify you have no errors. Find a tutorial on the web for this. There are many.

                    Encode from WAV to FLAC. (Free lossless audio compression format.) A quick google search will also yield this result. Again, this software is free and includes zero cumbersome DRM "features."

                    When you burn to CD, extract back to wave from FLAC and burn the wave, use an error checked mode to burn.

                    Using this method, your rips and your burned copies should be bit-perfect to the original disk.

                    If you do not have a means of playing FLAC, I suggest looking into the PS Audio DAC and a FLAC plugin for either Winamp or Foobar 2000.

                    Alternatively, it is possible to leave everything in wav format. The biggest downside is the lack of tagging features and disk space. Since disk space is cheap as dirt these days, the only downside is lack of tagging features. Consistent file naming and the EAC's auto-creation of folders and playlists can be a great work-around here.

                    Good luck!
                    Karl
                    My Chain: PC Audio (EAC + FLAC) --> USB --> PS Audio Digital Link III USB DAC --> Exodus XLR's -->
                    Parasound Halo P3 --> Exodus XLR's --> Parasound HCA3500 --> Custom Exodus Audio 2641 Speakers

                    Comment

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