LarsHP
Headphoneus Supremus
All these upgrade gadgets in order to optimize the performance of the R26 just points me to sending it back.The upgrade path for the LAN input on the R26 was some of the very first things discussed on this thread, if you have a good R2R DAC with an inbuilt LAN streamer it makes sense to try to get the very best signal via the network cable. So began the use of an inline passive LAN cleaner such as the Delocker. Then came the use of fibre optic modules (FMC's) to isolate electrical noise in the LAN cable itself, these made a big leap in fidelity. Less noise more music.
But the biggest difference by far was applying the principle of separating the router from the audio side of things so a dirty side and a clean side is created. Using a wifi extender (plug in wall with RJ45 output) achieved this and really made a beneficial difference to the sound. Then using a network switch to connect only the audio components (R26 + media server + wi-fi extender) with a decent linear power supply to keep harmful electrical noise at bay. I then found using the FMC's in-between the switch and R26 LAN to give the most benefit using Cat7/8 which have the connected ground.
Use of a 10Mhz reference clock (even the modestly priced Leo Bodnar @ £160) with the R26 is the final addition which really does set this DAC apart to play music. Music just flows beautifully, it's glorious, no "excellent hi-fi" sound but an excellent music player, incredible depth and 3D sound with great natural detail you can follow.
The best compliment I can give is that it sounds like a really good turntable now, I'm talking about Voyd or RMS Genesis level.
I still have to address additional screening within the R26, just waiting for the materials. Screening things really does help.
Seriously, I wouldn't return the R26 until you've tried some, or better still, all of the above. My R26 cannot be compared to when I first listened to it last September, it's in a different league completely.
Anyone want to back me up on this......
Again, to me, the whole point of getting the R26 was that it was a simple do it all box. Plug in the network cable, and you get the best the R26 can do, instead of having the hassle to isolate noise from a USB connection.