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In Reply to: RE: Yep that's correct posted by Gordon Rankin on October 17, 2014 at 05:57:05
There is a serious problem in this forum Gordon. It appears that the number of mean spirited posts that are essentially baseless are on the rise.
Some people find it necessary to repeat their views over and over and mock other inmates that take another approach to this hobby.
This is becoming an unpleasant place.
Follow Ups:
Save it Steve.
GR has been among the rudest posters on this forum, and he has been in the middle of massive spiraled threads.
He has had no problem insulting competitors like Steve Nugent.
And you don't keep repeating your view that anything Wavelength 'must' be good?
For how many years have you been doing this, starting with their 13 1/2 bit usb dac, when others are using 19 bit ones like the Krells?
The only problem was that the Krells didn't sound like music while the Wavelength DAC did.The last time I spoke about the sound of a Wavelength DAC was over 2 years ago.
Edits: 10/17/14
didn't set it up well? There was no way that a 13.5 bit dac sounded better than a properly set up Krell or TEAC high end except when a listener prefers harmonic and intermodulation noises. Hence the valve output.
I know that you need silver and valves for the 'correct' sound. My Krell sounds fine in a balanced system.
I hope your fire insurance is paid up.
Tony Lauck
"Diversity is the law of nature; no two entities in this universe are uniform." - P.R. Sarkar
fully paid; I use mainly genuine Class A boxes.
My dCS dac is in a closed box and stabilises at exactly 70C, higher than some PCs. There is no fan and is a deliberate design choice.
I was making a joke. (See below.) Glad that your insurance is paid up. I wouldn't worry about your dCS gear. dCS is a quality company.
Tony Lauck
"Diversity is the law of nature; no two entities in this universe are uniform." - P.R. Sarkar
it is unusual for a class A output device to be encased in an unventilated enclosure. dCS seemed to have done this to keep dust out and to achieve a constant temperature environment.
Takes a bit of doing but the guy had a Cambridge PhD and worked on fighter radar signal conditioning and recovery.
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