Massdrop x Airist Audio R-2R DAC: A Discrete Resistor Ladder DAC For $350
Jun 9, 2018 at 10:23 PM Post #181 of 564
Thank you for researching and publishing this! To me, this seems plausible and believable (though I'm not an electrical engineer, I should add). I could imagine that there's still some room for tuning in that layout for someone talented, so it's a bit sad that there was no drive to make this part of it more unique simply by improving on it, but it sounds like both DACs have some shared history anyway. Maybe @sosolar can comment on whether he was aware of the reference material on hifidiy.net that you mentioned.



While I'm inclined to believe you, this would be a very welcome step to resolve this as far as I am concerned.



Maybe there could be a collaboration between Massdrop and sosolar on that one, especially given how many Massdrop members expressed disappointment about the RDAC being single ended. I imagine that would be advantageous to both parties, and a nice outcome of this debacle.

Thanks man, appreciate your response. Far as the idea of a Massdrop x Sosolar DAC goes, we're open to talking about it, I suggested that it would be better to work together in my communication to sosolar. It could be cool if he's got a balanced version ready to go with great sound. The things that make the RDAC sound good come from the other 75% of the design more or less, but we could validate a sosolar-designed balanced DAC through the same process we did for the RDAC and hopefully it's great. Are there any hibiki impressions in English you've found? I haven't had much luck searching.
 
Jun 9, 2018 at 10:26 PM Post #182 of 564
Thanks for the response Will. MassDrop should have been more transparent about this since the beginning, instead of the responses that seemed like they were side stepping the issue or dismissing it completely. It all makes sense though and it seems to be the fault of Airist's contract engineer. They should have detailed to their superior or project manager about using existing designs and influences and asked for permission to proceed. It would be great if MassDrop/Airist bring on sosolar as a contract engineer for a balanced version later.

Yea believe me man, I would have preferred to post this on Monday, it just takes time to gather this information, really understand what's being said, understand how that's being understood by the broader community, and how it can be presented in a public place.

These things take time to unwrap, but hopefully, we can conclude through third-party verification or discussion with sosolar. Much as I love these products and communities (been here since I was 13) I also love spending weekends with my girlfriend and dog lol.
 
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Jun 9, 2018 at 10:42 PM Post #183 of 564
Thanks man, appreciate your response. Far as the idea of a Massdrop x Sosolar DAC goes, we're open to talking about it, I suggested that it would be better to work together in my communication to sosolar. It could be cool if he's got a balanced version ready to go with great sound. The things that make the RDAC sound good come from the other 75% of the design more or less, but we could validate a sosolar-designed balanced DAC through the same process we did for the RDAC and hopefully it's great. Are there any hibiki impressions in English you've found? I haven't had much luck searching.
I haven't looked, honestly*! After looking at your hifidiy.net link, and given how much I like the Gustard H20 and how difficult it was to gather the right specs for it due to translation mishaps, I was wondering whether I should start learning Mandarin or Cantonese :-D (starting with figuring out which one was used on that site, I suppose).
It would certainly be a good first step to get a Hibiki into Massdrop HQ and check out whether it has potential. No point in collaborating if it's not a good value.

* okay, I started looking after writing the above... this is pretty much the only thing I found:
I read from a Chinese forum Hibiki sounds like TDA1541 while comparing to DAM1021 sounds like PCM1704. The Hibiki seemed to have some resolution problem.Of course this doesn't really make much sense because DA chip itself often doesn't have strong sound character. Maybe it's implying if the circuit was fine in the design, then maybe digital filter was not that good.
(Source)
 
Jun 9, 2018 at 10:48 PM Post #184 of 564
I haven't looked, honestly*! After looking at your hifidiy.net link, and given how much I like the Gustard H20 and how difficult it was to gather the right specs for it due to translation mishaps, I was wondering whether I should start learning Mandarin or Cantonese :-D (starting with figuring out which one was used on that site, I suppose).
It would certainly be a good first step to get a Hibiki into Massdrop HQ and check out whether it has potential. No point in collaborating if it's not a good value.

* okay, I started looking after writing the above... this is pretty much the only thing I found:

(Source)

Thanks for the link! Hopefully, we can keep the conversation going with sosolar and determine if he's got something the community would appreciate :thumbsup:
 
Jun 9, 2018 at 10:48 PM Post #185 of 564
Hey Friends,


I was hoping to avoid making another post on this topic, but given sosolar’s most recent posts, I feel it’s necessary to summarize and clarify the statements and claims made.


Sosolar surfaced in the Massdrop RDAC discussion at the beginning of the week, claiming the RDAC was a copy of his Hibiki project. A lot of people got excited by this, maybe not understanding all the details, but seeing the layouts of the PCBs looked the same, and accepting that as proof of sosolar’s claims.


Seeing that post, we (Massdrop) were surprised to see the similarities as well. We were unfamiliar with the hibiki DAC, and we didn’t play a role in the development of that top PCB, so we reached out to William at Airist. He let us know he wasn’t familiar with the project either, and was reaching out to his engineering manager to get more information (thus the post from William explaining reference designs and saying he was unfamiliar with the hibiki DAC).


At this stage, we needed to get details from the engineering manager and the contract engineers he hired to work on this project. The layouts looked the same as the RDAC, but the arrangement of some parts was different, and the spacing between parts was also different. That’s all we knew at the time. Sosolar continued to feed the discussion, making further claims, and posting details of his project on various discussion boards, talking about releasing a product and gathering feedback. At this point, I had already provided my contact information as a direct response to his comment on our discussion, and received no response.


While this was happening, we were able to speak with the engineering manager from Airist and his contract engineer. The engineer explained his process; initially he was provided with a set of specifications, a mandate for a ladder arrangement that would meet the specs of William’s overall design (the top PCB represents ~25% of the overall RDAC design). Given that mandate, he began searching for reference material, and discovered this reference design posted for free use (says that on the post) in 2014: http://bbs.hifidiy.net/forum.php?mod=viewthread&tid=994769


From the basis of this reference design, he looked for examples of layouts that could provide a good baseline, while allowing him to build the underlying structure to serve the purpose of William’s design. Important note here, PCBs have multiple layers, the top board of the RDAC has four. The top layer is where components are positioned, but the content of the other layers determine how those components interact.


At this point, the engineer found the Hibiki DAC, and while the same configuration of parts wouldn’t yield the desired result, the general layout would work for this project, so he used it as a reference and creating the RDAC top PCB layout. This is why it looks the same, and why we subsequently posted as much in our discussion. My wording could have been more direct, but it’s not an exact copy, so “inspired by” seemed like the best option, but ultimately it was more confusing than clarifying. The position of parts is nearly the same, but sosolar continued to post, accusing Airist’s team of reverse engineering the board, which isn’t the case.


From there, still having received no contact from sosolar, I reached out to the email address associated with his Massdrop account, explaining that I’d like to understand exactly what he’s saying, and to understand more about the Hibiki project in general. Now I want to pause here, and make clear an important understanding in professional communication. Emails are intended for the specified recipients, and it’s bad form to break that trust. I won’t be posting screenshots or exact wording from his message, but following sosolar’s most recent posts I feel it’s important to share some of the general themes in our communication.


He responded to my messaging with a development timeline for the Hibiki DAC, starting in June 2015 and ending in July 2016, and demanded that we post a comparable timeline for RDAC development. His timeline had great detail, with lots of links to posts and things of that nature, which makes sense given the Hibiki was developed publicly, with sosolar sharing details with the hifidiy.net community. It’d be nice if posting a timeline would answer the questions at hand, but the RDAC development was private, there are no public posts to verify the statement. Given the many responses from people saying they didn’t believe our previous statements, I didn’t think an unverifiable timeline would answer questions for anybody.


The most important part of Sosolar’s response, was around some parts in the design he said were unnecessary, essentially saying they were stylistic choices on his part, that wouldn’t exist on another board unless the functionality was being copied through a reverse engineering service.


All of these parts which are unnecessary for the HIbiki, but are critical to the function of the RDAC. We answered all of Sosolar’s questions directly, here is the explanation we provided for each of the sections sosolar called out:


For the op amps:


The op amps on the RDAC top board are not just buffers, they are necessary for the operation of a sign-magnitude ladder. The output from a network of so many resistors is very weak, so we have to bring that signal strength up or else further processing will drown it in noise. These op amps do that amplifying, merge the outputs from the positive and negative ladders into one output waveform, and filter out the switching artifacts.


For the large transistors:


Because the R-2R ladder is basically a 48 resistor network on each side, you need a fair amount of current to actually drive the whole thing, not to mention extra overhead.


For the logic switches:


These are the same switches used in the open source schematic posted in 2014, and that is how the engineer picked this part.


Sosolar’s response to this message said that he was waiting for us to post the timeline, followed by a sentence that I think was trying to suggest he wasn’t accusing Airist of reverse engineering and copying the DAC design, but the layout alone (not trying to knock his english, I don’t write a character of chinese, but I couldn’t understand his wording) which would be a change from his previous statements, but I can’t be sure. Hopefully we can talk about this on the phone where mandarin/cantonese speaking team members can remove the language barrier in this technical discussion.


I responded to his message early this morning, hoping to catch him still awake so we could have a call, and in that email I proposed a solution that would give clarity to the community. We could both provide our gerber files to an unbiased third party (I suggested the new editor of IF, guy has no skin in this, and I’ve been asking folks for his contact info today in an effort to reach out and see if he could do this), they can examine the files and tell the community if the RDAC top pcb is a copy of the Hibiki pcb. I haven’t received a response from sosolar, but it’ll be morning in China soon, so hopefully sosolar is game for what seems like a pretty amenable situation.


TL;DR


Overall the layout of parts on the hibiki DAC and the top board of the RDAC are nearly the same. Neither Massdrop or William Tse of Airist was aware of the Hibiki DAC before sosolar’s post on Massdrop. The layout is not 1:1, but it’s clearly close enough where folks feel it’s essentially 1:1. We’ve explained how the hibiki layout was used by Airist’s contract engineer, and hats off to sosolar for creating a layout that works for the RDAC’s execution needs. If he had interest in compensation for this, he has plenty of avenues available to express that, as it stands, it seems he’s more interested in posting about the balanced hibiki he’s releasing this August. The similarities end at that top layer, and we’re glad to provide RDAC files for verification by an unbiased third party.


We’re doing everything we can to resolve this amicably, and we’ll keep trying, hopefully sosolar will engage with us.

Thank you for taking time out on the weekend to reply. However, this might be a little too late for some.

As I said before I'm disappointed at the actions taken by you and MD. I would have totally bought this explanation if MD would have postponed the launch to do the investigation first. But instead, MD callously decided to launch. And put out a statement claiming the top board has nothing to do with Hibiki design before making any contact with sosolar? Also, your arrogance in hinting that this dispute might actually be benefited sosolar because it brings attention to the Hibiki? And just now you still try to play lost in translation and mocking sosolar's English? You could have had your Chinese speaking staff write him the message! Simple as that! (Will took time and effort to PM me and addressed the situation in regards to the language barrier and I'm satisfied)

I'm not buying your explanation at this point because it sound more like damage control.

But hey, mistake happens. You still have the chance to make it right. As suggested by others you can collaborate with sosolar to develop the balanced version providing that he is as good as he claims. I'll say that's a happy ending!
 
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Jun 9, 2018 at 10:56 PM Post #186 of 564
I haven't looked, honestly*! After looking at your hifidiy.net link, and given how much I like the Gustard H20 and how difficult it was to gather the right specs for it due to translation mishaps, I was wondering whether I should start learning Mandarin or Cantonese :-D (starting with figuring out which one was used on that site, I suppose).

In this case its the written form and not Cantonese or Mandarin (spoken language). In general Chinese websites in China, all using simplified form and all other Chinese speaking countries use the Traditional form. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Debate_on_traditional_and_simplified_Chinese_characters

I'm sure MD has staff who can understand either one or both.
 
Jun 9, 2018 at 11:08 PM Post #187 of 564
I would have totally bought this explanation if MD would have postponed the launch to do the investigation first. But instead, MD callously decided to launch.
To be fair, no money is collected until the drop ends (June 30th), so they still have quite a bit of time left to finish investigating this. Since they also had all reason to assume no foul play on their own end, disrupting their own plans based on some allegations would have been hasty as well. As it stands, they could still cancel the drop and the people who joined simply wouldn't get charged. No harm done.

In this case its the written form and not Cantonese or Mandarin (spoken language). In general Chinese websites in China, all using simplified form and all other Chinese speaking countries use the Traditional form. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Debate_on_traditional_and_simplified_Chinese_characters

I'm sure MD has staff who can understand either one or both.
Hah, that clearly exposes my level of ignorance in this regard. Thanks!
While they probably do have staff able to read Chinese in general, they may not necessarily be native speakers, and either way, it may still be quite hard to translate specific engineering terminology appropriately. And broken English is broken English, it's only marginally easier to decipher if the author's mother tongue is the same as yours.
 
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Jun 10, 2018 at 1:25 AM Post #189 of 564
I responded to his message early this morning, hoping to catch him still awake so we could have a call, and in that email I proposed a solution that would give clarity to the community. We could both provide our gerber files to an unbiased third party (I suggested the new editor of IF, guy has no skin in this, and I’ve been asking folks for his contact info today in an effort to reach out and see if he could do this), they can examine the files and tell the community if the RDAC top pcb is a copy of the Hibiki pcb. I haven’t received a response from sosolar, but it’ll be morning in China soon, so hopefully sosolar is game for what seems like a pretty amenable situation.
I'm eagerly anticipating those results because if they show the PCB is indeed different there will be so many "outraged" people who will have to eat a big heaping plate of crow. If they don't, someone has some explaining to do.
 
Jun 10, 2018 at 1:49 AM Post #190 of 564
Since Massdrop has no respect for intellectual property, I won't be buying anything in the future from them. I am probably not alone. Stuff like this hurts innovation and people taking chances on new designs.
I agree. Nobody should endorse or make business with anyone committing a crime like intellectual property theft. Too bad MD wasn't careful enough...
 
Jun 10, 2018 at 3:32 PM Post #191 of 564
Since Massdrop has no respect for intellectual property, I won't be buying anything in the future from them. I am probably not alone. Stuff like this hurts innovation and people taking chances on new designs.

I'm having a hard time blaming MD for this, as they just hired a company to design a product for them. I'm far more upset with Airist for saying "Look at this great thing we made all by ourselves!" I think MD just needs to be more careful who they start collabs with moving forward. That's just my two cents.

Edit: I'll continue supporting Massdrop with my hard-earned $$, since I feel they value the community, but I will never buy anything from Airist.
 
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Jun 10, 2018 at 3:52 PM Post #192 of 564
I'm having a hard time blaming MD for this, as they just hired a company to design a product for them. I'm far more upset with Airist for saying "Look at this great thing we made all by ourselves!".
Yes, thats very unfortunate that Airist or maybe I should say that "someone" in Airist was really dishonest to present the idea as his/her own. However, I feel that Massdrop shouldn't support plagiarism and stop it at all cost, but MD seems to continue regardless and that to my eyes makes MD a partner in crime.
 
Jun 10, 2018 at 9:11 PM Post #193 of 564
I look forward to seeing the outcome of a gerber review. I personally suspect that someone found this as a reference and used it for the initial layout, why mess with something that is clean an elegant. The overall layout was used as a reference and then design was tailored to a specific use. It happens in the software engineering world ALL the time.
 
Jun 11, 2018 at 8:08 AM Post #194 of 564
While they probably do have staff able to read Chinese in general, they may not necessarily be native speakers, and either way, it may still be quite hard to translate specific engineering terminology appropriately. And broken English is broken English, it's only marginally easier to decipher if the author's mother tongue is the same as yours.
TBH, given MD (as well as almost every other manufacturer) does so much of their manufacturing in China, I'd suggest that they'd be completely irresponsible not to have a fluent Mandarin speaker on staff, or at least hire a translator on a contract basis. On the other side of the coin, there are plenty of Chinese with very good English too.
 
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Jun 11, 2018 at 8:16 AM Post #195 of 564
I'm eagerly anticipating those results because if they show the PCB is indeed different there will be so many "outraged" people who will have to eat a big heaping plate of crow. If they don't, someone has some explaining to do.
Assuming there is shady business going on here, unless someone can test the existing demo units, I have a feeling testing with production units will reveal they are indeed incompatible. After all, they have until December to ship. And I'm sure it won't be hard to do some tiny change to the PCB to render it incompatible with Hibiki within that time frame.

Edit: Oops. Missed the part about the gerber files being compared, not the physical boards. My bad.
 
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