External USB sound card, digital out

Jul 2, 2004 at 2:52 AM Thread Starter Post #1 of 27

ampgalore

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I have a Yamaha DP-U50 external USB soundcard. There is an optical out. So when I use the optical out on the soundcard, does the data from the computer go through the Yamaha's DAC? Or is it bypassed?
 
Jul 2, 2004 at 3:54 PM Post #3 of 27
Thanks.

Then if you use the digital out on the soundcard, and use an external DAC, is there a difference in sound quality amongst the different external usb soundcards?
 
Jul 2, 2004 at 4:08 PM Post #4 of 27
Yes. Some USB sound devices (e.g. Xitel) can only output signals at 48kHz, so the digital signal gets resampled before being output. There are other USB devices that can output a 44.1kHz signal but don't do it perfectly.
 
Jul 2, 2004 at 4:15 PM Post #5 of 27
The Grace 901 has a indicators indicating the input sampling rate. I was using foobar last night, looks like the Grace was getting 44.1khz input.

Any ideas on how good the Yamaha DP-U50 digital output is?
 
Jul 2, 2004 at 4:46 PM Post #6 of 27
That's very good to know. I don't have any more information about the U50's digital out. Do you have a home theatre receiver? If so, you can test the device to see if it's bit-perfect.
 
Jul 2, 2004 at 5:13 PM Post #7 of 27
No, I don't have a home theater receiver.

All I have are Benchmark DAC1, and the Grace 901.

How would you test to see if the optical output from the Yamaha soundcard is bit perfect?
 
Jul 2, 2004 at 5:31 PM Post #8 of 27
The easiest way is to download a 44.1kHz PCM encoded DTS/Dolby Digital test file and try playing it back through a digital link to a home theatre receiver that can decode DTS/Dolby Digital. If all the bits come through unchanged, the receiver will be able to decode it, and you'll hear music. Otherwise, you'll hear loud static. If you're concerned about the quality of your digital output, it's worth borrowing a friend's HT receiver for an evening just to try this out. If you do, please report back your findings to the forum, so we'll be able to help out others.

The other way to check for bit-perfectness is to connect the card's digital out to a sound card with a digital in, and record the output and compare it on a bit-by-bit basis with the source material, after adjusting for the initial offset. There is one guy on HydrogenAudio who does this.
 
Jul 2, 2004 at 5:33 PM Post #9 of 27
Thanks, I'll try to find someone that'll loan me his HT receiver
biggrin.gif


Where can you find those test files?
 
Jul 2, 2004 at 5:34 PM Post #10 of 27
Which reminds me, the Yamaha usb sound card has both digital in and digital out. Does that mean I can make a loop, connect a toslink cable from the digital out to the digital out, feed back to itself?

The Yamaha card supposedly can decode dolby digital and down mix to dolby surround but not DTS.
 
Jul 2, 2004 at 5:47 PM Post #11 of 27
Jul 3, 2004 at 5:12 PM Post #13 of 27
Let us know when you've had a chance to do the test, ampgalore. I'm curious, since the digital out *does* appear to be at the mercy of the volume control knob, suggesting it might not be bit-perfect.
 
Jul 4, 2004 at 4:07 AM Post #15 of 27
Yep, you're right, my bad.
 

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