Triode User
Member of the Trade: WAVE High Fidelity
Serious question.
Does the mscaler improve massively over Tidal as well? Or it must be high res stuff?
No need for it to be hi res. Red book (ie Tidal or Qobuz) is amazing with mscaler.
Serious question.
Does the mscaler improve massively over Tidal as well? Or it must be high res stuff?
I’m quite confused by this comment...I just use Tidal with my Mac set to output a 96 as opposed to 44 1 signal so am not the best person to comment other than to say everything from the TT2 sounds a lot better than the Sony...
I have Tidal set to recognise the TT2 / Mscaler so guess it sorts it for me.I’m quite confused by this comment...
If your TT2 is connected to the Mac via USB, and you’re listening to music on Tidal using the Tidal app, it doesn’t matter what your Audio MIDI setup is provided that you choose in the Tidal app for the Sound Output to go to TT2. The Tidal app would automatically switch between 44.1kHz vs 96kHz or 88kHz depending on your music source and you should see the color of your TT2 change.
If you’re connecting in a different manner and is persistently forcing Tidal to play at 96kHz, then obviously, you’re not going to hear much improvement with M-Scaler. For 44kHz music, you’re letting your Mac to do ASRC and inferior upsampling to 96kHz which dramatically destroys the transient accuracy instead of letting TT2 (and M-Scaler) to directly up sample to 705.4kHz with their respective 98304 and 1 million taps. For 96kHz music, you’ll be getting it from MQA which is an encoding with very poor transient accuracy because you’re not actually listening to the original 96kHz lossless track so once again, of course, the difference between TT2 (& M-scaler) when you’re playing poor source materials is going to be smaller.
Or just make your own and put the 1K you save to some future Chord gear when released.It is unfortunate that the M Scaler needing upgraded cables to sound their best. With that said I opted to copy Rob's choice, WAVE to be "safe."
Cry once, buy once applied for me.
I used the WAVE cables' wooden box as storage for my spare/stock cables as it was just the right size.
Yes, but I'm lazy as I try and listen to Master Audio songs and forget to change. There is no auto setting on the Mac sadly.
Doing this should always be avoided. Your player software should have a way of bypassing the OS Sound Manager and it’s homogenisation of the signal. You won’t need to manually change anything once it’s configured properly, should be called Exclusive mode or something similar. Others here using the computer as a player should be able to let you know how to set this up???
What are your roon and hqplayer settings?Yeah exclusive mode in roon, Tidal, Qobuz, Audirvana, HQPlayer, all have auto switching. iTunes and last I’ve heard Amazon music HD doesn’t auto switch. Even though Amazon has exclusive mode, it doesn’t switch the rate.
If you play back at wrong rate, the Mac is doing its own upsampling/downsampling which will effect the original file and the mscaler’s ability to properly restore the analog signal.
What are your roon and hqplayer settings?
I've been having good experiences with hqplayer and tt2. Why don't you recommend hqplayer with chord?W
Well I don’t recommend HQPlayer with Chord products and roon is just the default settings you get when you plug in the mscaler and roon identifies it. I actually hook up with optical now, but manual follow the same setup. But make sure exclusive mode is toggled and volume control is fixed.
I've been having good experiences with hqplayer and tt2. Why don't you recommend hqplayer with chord?
I’m quite confused by this comment...
If your TT2 is connected to the Mac via USB, and you’re listening to music on Tidal using the Tidal app, it doesn’t matter what your Audio MIDI setup is provided that you choose in the Tidal app for the Sound Output to go to TT2. The Tidal app would automatically switch between 44.1kHz vs 96kHz or 88kHz depending on your music source and you should see the color of your TT2 change.
If you’re connecting in a different manner and is persistently forcing Tidal to play at 96kHz, then obviously, you’re not going to hear much improvement with M-Scaler. For 44kHz music, you’re letting your Mac to do ASRC and inferior upsampling to 96kHz which dramatically destroys the transient accuracy instead of letting TT2 (and M-Scaler) to directly up sample to 705.4kHz with their respective 98304 and 1 million taps. For 96kHz music, you’ll be getting it from MQA which is an encoding with very poor transient accuracy because you’re not actually listening to the original 96kHz lossless track so once again, of course, the difference between TT2 (& M-scaler) when you’re playing poor source materials is going to be smaller.
Exactly my thought, which is why I asked for clarification.
Just to check this - the Tidal app on my computer is set to recognise and have 'control' of the TT2 in the streaming settings thus I assume it is effectively bypassing anything set on the Mac ?