Chord
I’m going to tackle the Chord DACs as a family, partly because they are and partly because that’s how I got to audition them.
Note that I got to listen to some of the Chord products driving both headphone and speaker systems, so comments about 3D soundstages are coming from evaluations on the speaker side of things.
And I’ll start here by saying that I already own the Mojo, and that it is not a contender as an alternative purchase to a second Yggdrasil for a variety of practical reasons and I’m just referencing it here as it’ll be familiar to many people.
I’m also going to draw a few comparisons to Mojo here, not just Yggdrasil.
Mojo (!)
Not a comparison to Yggdrasil, just an unreserved recommendation for what, so far, is an absolutely fabulous little DAC. That it is tiny, portable, and works beautifully without an amp is just icing on the cake.
At anything close to its price point,
and in several cases well beyond that, I think this is the best DAC available. I would take this over several of the more expensive units in my evaluation so far; you’ll have to read the specific notes to see which – I’ll include the (!) indicator where this is the case (though it will be used for other things too).
Hugo (-)(!)
The Hugo has a somewhat brighter signature than the Mojo. Or, perhaps, it might be more correct to say that the Mojo has a slightly fleshier presentation, than the Hugo, as I wouldn’t, generally, describe Hugo as being “bright”.
Not sure if that’s a result of some apparent high-treble roll-off on the Mojo or not, but that’s how it sounds when I listen to them directly.
Driving sensitive IEMs directly I get more hiss from the Hugo than from the Mojo (I didn’t do this test for all DACs, but since it’s a portable device I tried it with my SE846 for good measure), though hiss-levels are so low on the Mojo that I have to listen for it.
Hugo might be interesting for portable use but the fact that it’s so much larger than the Mojo, and cannot be charged from USB, pretty much renders it impractical for me.
Compared to Yggdrasil, Hugo falls a bit flat for me. While it is not far off in terms of detail, I felt the Hugo lacked a little weight to its presentation. With some sharper female vocals, the Hugo felt a bit less comfortable than Yggdrasil, bordering on sibilant at times. I also preferred Yggdrasil’s rendering of piano and brass. Hugo was quite impressive, but it didn’t really engage or involve me in a musical sense.
Yggdrasil, for me, betters the Hugo in terms of tone, detail, attack, overall balance and musicality though I’d say they are extremely close from an imaging/soundstage perspective.
I prefer the signature of Mojo to Hugo.
2Qute (-)(!)
I could discern no difference between this and Hugo.
I prefer the signature of Mojo over 2Qute.
Hugo TT (-)
A little more air to the presentation than it siblings, and a bottom end that seems more like Mojo than Hugo, while actually resolving more detail than Mojo, particularly in the upper registers, but not apparent on every recording by any means.
I think Yggdrasil beats this in most categories, though the Hugo TT yielded a slightly more palpable 3D soundstage and in some cases had a tad more air to the rendering.
If they were the same price, I’d still take Yggdrasil over Hugo TT, but since Hugo TT is more than double the price of Yggdrasil it makes the decision even easier for me.
Bear in mind that Hugo TT doesn’t sit that well in the middle of a rack (it’ll work, but it makes it fiddlier to see what’s going on and to operate directly).
DAVE (+)
Without wanting to beat about the bush, DAVE is the best reproduction of digital music that I have ever heard. In other words, it’s the best sounding DAC I’ve experienced to date.
On every individual measure it pulls ahead of Yggdrasil. In some areas more than others, but I didn’t find any point of my evaluation where the check-mark went in the Schiit DAC’s column. To be sure, some of the differences were about my own subjective preferences and others might prefer Yggdrasil’s performance in that area. And certainly some of the differences were, even then, very small. But they were something I found consistent.
DAVE plays beautiful, detailed, nuanced, textured, flowing, sonorous, engaging, emotive music.
I did not want to stop listening, and wound up listening to quite a bit more than my normal audition play list (I really need to get that posted). Exploring everything from acapella vocals, and being enchanted not just by the tone but the incredible sense of air and space in the presentation, to complex, layered, orchestral work and being able to pick
seemingly any individual instrument (not just section, or row) and follow it. Yggdrasil actually gets pretty close on this last point as well, so do the Linn units oddly enough, but it’s a little harder to focus on the individual.
Timbre was, as far as I can tell, as close to perfect as I could ever evaluate. This is the only DAC I’ve heard that renders piano (a focus for me) as well as Yggdrasil. I wouldn’t say it does the tone better, but it isn’t giving anything up there either.
Sound-stage/imaging was out of this world, both with headphones and, especially, with speakers.
With Yggdrasil, and the right recording, I’ve gotten quite accustomed to being able to hear the change in location of a note played on the piano based on where it emanates from in the soundstage. In other words, you can very easily perceive the left-to-right transition as an ascending passage is played across the keyboard.
DAVE actually managed this even more vividly, which surprised me. This certainly wasn’t as apparent with any of the other Chord units, and it was something I didn’t really get from any other DAC.
Transparency and detail are extremely impressive, without seeming bright at all. There was no sense of exaggeration or artificiality to the detail, just oodles of information presented in a natural and un-emphasized fashion. I had the sense that more detail was being rendered than with Yggdrasil. Not much more. And not in everything. But, for example, the bounce and taughtness of a drum-skin, and the decaying oscillation of a Timpani, were more subtle and nuanced than anything else I’ve heard – and it was possible to easily detect the sticks hitting different areas of that skin.
This is particularly evident when listening directly through the headphone output. It sounds
fantastic. This would be my preferred way to listen to DAVE with most headphones. I’d make exceptions for the LCD-4 and the Abyss … I preferred those via an external amplifier – even though that path results in a minor, but noticeable, loss in transparency.
Transients, attack, decay … are all magnificent. Yggdrasil does those things incredibly well and this is one area in which DAVE is really only just creeping ahead. And that might be a different thing I’m hearing, perhaps the transparency is affecting my perception, but either way it’s exceptional.
I could go on, item, by item, drawing comparisons, but I don’t feel the need to. DAVE was ahead, by more, or less, in every area and, most importantly, it grabbed me, engaged me and involved me, in the music in a way that I found addictive, emotive, and nourishing. And that’s about as much as I can ask of any component.
Yggdrasil does this too … to be sure, and better than almost everything else … and it’s less that DAVE plays
music, as such, meaningfully better than it just exhibits slight improvements on a technical/evaluative level while STILL having that musical and emotive capacity. So, really, the best of both worlds …
It’s an amazing piece.
Rob is, I hope, as justifiably proud of his accomplishments here as, I would also hope, Mike is of his. In fact I think Mike should be prouder … as his creation is much cheaper and only just slightly behind, overall, what I find with DAVE!
So … on sound/music reproduction … for me … this is the high-point so far.
But … as I mentioned, there are things about this DAC that rub me entirely the wrong way. Actually, truth be told, they’re applicable pretty much across the Chord line, and particularly, something I ran into with the Hugo TT …
I consider the appearance, or aesthetics, of DAVE to be something of a “
Marmite” thing. And, in my case, I don’t care for the look of the unit at all. It seems to aim for “futuristic” but, for me, winds up falling somewhere between fussy and really rather ugly.
DAVE doesn’t sit well in the rack, either. If it’s not the top-most unit then the controls and display are not exactly easy to get at/read. I could space the shelves further apart, but that causes me other issues. And you could buy the stand, which tilts things forward some and makes it easier to interact with, but that’s almost as expensive as the DAC I’m comparing this too and is very off-putting on that basis.
It’s almost as if the thing was designed this way to promote sales of that stand. That’s how it feels to me, at least. And I don’t like that. I’d be less irritated by if the stand wasn’t so expensive (and I’m not buying that it makes any sonic difference … I’ve yet to hear, a benefit to such things with purely solid-state gear).
The remote would, ideally, fix these issues … and display-aside it largely does. But it’s a very cheap feeling affair compared to the solidity and quality of the rest of the build. This doesn’t help my aesthetic perceptions of the unit at all.
Getting support on a DSD-dropout issue proved to be fruitless. This wasn’t specifically with DAVE, though it seems to affect that unit too. But it left a very poor impression of Chord’s support (directly, or via their dealers), the issue was never resolved – and for the most part even once I was connected with someone, they just never responded to the results of the questions they asked or the information I provided.
As it happens, I’ve since decided not to bother with DSD this isn’t a technical issue and doesn’t affect my evaluation of DAVE. However, I do consider such poor support to be an issue with a purchase at this level and it taints my view of the company and its commitment to its customers.
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So sonically, this easily hits the mark. I find it better, pretty much across the board, than Yggdrasil and, for that matter, every other DAC I’ve heard to this point. How it fares against the DACs I still have to audition is impossible to predict, but given how hard it has been just to meet, let alone beat, Yggdrasil so far – it seems like a tall order to elevate things even further.
On that, only time, and listening, will tell.
Acknowledging that
this is the best DAC I’ve heard is easy. Convincing myself to actually
buy one is going to be a
lot harder. This thing is nearly six times the price of Yggdrasil, and between two and four times the price of the other units currently on my shortlist. That’s a big jump and the law of diminishing returns is in very full force here … the gains might be across the board but individually they’re mostly relatively small. Apparent, but small.
I also have to get past the aesthetics which are very polarizing for me. This would be in my main listening room, which is a very visually coherent space … and DAVE is distinctive enough that it’s going to stick out like a sore thumb (or wind up being less than ideal to actually use).
But, so far, this is the front-runner … and convincingly so.