dryvadeum
1000+ Head-Fier
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- Jan 6, 2013
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Hi guys, I may have some money coming my way soon and wanted to get some advice on a good DAC/AMP Combo to drive my HE 500'S for $400 AUD. I like a clean transparent sound.
It is worth considering the Audio gd NFB5. I havn't heard the HE500 but it should drive it with relative ease. It uses dual WM8741 DAC chips.
I have been using the NFB-5 for about a year and in my view it outperforms many units twice the price. It's very good with low impedance headphones and certainly has enough power to drive the HE500.
Would it be better than the M & M Schiit stack?
I have no direct experience with the M & M, but the NFB-5 has several obvious advantages:
- DAC that is not powered through USB
- multiple inputs
- preamp output
- endless amount of power, delivered effortlessly
Would the Audio GD NFB 10SE be a lot better than the NFB 5???
Not exactly the same units I tried before, but if you're considering a sec hand 10SE I suggest stretching your budget and go for a new NFB-10.32. The new USB32 input is reported to have better treble (although the NFB-10 has good treble on it's own, not harsh but smooth, and clean. I used to have a 10.2).
What I experienced through several nice and affordable Chinese DAC/Amps is that, the ones that use R-core transformers were always better than the ones with cheap toroidal (this probably doesn't apply for European, American or Japanese gear).
If you only need single ended output for your headphones, and if you have no plans to re-terminate to 4-pin XLR, probably the NFB-5 is ok. However, I definately recommend using headphones balanced for Audio-gd gear. You can immediately tell the difference, especially the powerful units with the R-core transformer.
Ok, thanks for the input. I'm now looking at the Violectric V90 - is that a better quality amp than the NFB5 or 10?
I don't have experience with the V90 sorry.
I just got a V181 few months ago and fell in love with it. Probably an end game for me with solid state balanced amps. It cost me nearly twice but exceeds the NFB-10's headphone amp section - hard to put in numbers, but I would say a 10% increase in performance from high to low, comparing both balanced.
I now have faith in Violectric/Lake People products but not sure if the V90 is on par with or outperforms the NFB-10. The NFB-10.2 did quite well and pretty close to the V181, so the 10.2 (and it's series) has an outstanding cost-performance ratio if you're looking for a one-box solution. Remember you need a DAC too if you're going to get a V90, but the NFB-10 already has it.
So I guess it depends if you want to go balanced or stay single ended with headphones.