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Head-Fi's Sybil
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- Jan 22, 2002
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I've just returned from the Home Entertainment Show and will post my thoughts on same in the Member's Lounge. However, this couldn't wait: The biggest news of the show for Head-fi members.
Vinnie Rossi is about to offer an iMod for the iPod 5G in collaboration with Ken Ball of Audio Line Out. The joint project will involve both the iMod and a special product from ALO which will probably be called the iMod Cable. But wait: There's something else to celebrate.
Listeners will no longer have to choose between fidelity and portability. As Vinnie himself put it:
"The new modification will bypass the stock line-out components (opamp stage, coupling caps before and after the opamp, resistors/inductors in the signal path, tiny board traces) by taking the line-out signal directly from the Wolfson DAC and hard-wiring it to the line-out dock connector."
The second stage of the modification -- Black Gate caps, et al. -- will be incorporated into a line-out cable made by Ken Ball of ALO, which will allow Vinnie to give us both options: the iModded line out and the standard headphone out.
The cable prototype I saw from a distance looked to be a coruscating copper-colored weave, which didn't surprise me. Ken Ball began as an artist, and his audio line reflects his beginnings: Aesthetically, ALO cables occupy the place between function and heaven, where techie perfectionism and hand-crafted jewelry merge into sinuous glittering sculpture.
The sound? I didn't have the chance to listen on headphones, as the setup was central to the crowded room, but the 5G mod shone spectacularly through Omega 8" full range drivers and Vinnie's Signature 30. Diana Krall's piano bench squeaked audibly as her engineers caught the full range of the piano's dynamics and frequencies; the click of the upper harmonics complimented the bell-like partials just below them; runs swept the registers realistically; the pedal resonated with low notes that were felt as easily as heard, dispensing with the iPod's so-called bass issues once and for nonce.
The iMod 5G had that high sheen one associates with decent audiophile sources, but there was no hole in the center of the sound, nor was there any high-mid distortion (both issues plagued a third of the setups I listened to at HES -- the latter issue due to reps having no apparent understanding of gain structure). Vinnie also played a bit of dub-inflected acid jazz, as well as Shostakovich's 12th Quartet, which means he was one of the few demo reps at HES whose selections suggested he had taste in music as well as equipment. He also had the sense to keep the volume down.
The price for the 5G iMod has yet to be established, but Vinnie and Ken will be offering it next month. It will be available for both the 5 and 5.5G models. Until then, I'll be focused on the 4G iMod, which Vinnie will be completing for me next week. That's right -- after hearing how scintillating the iMod actually sounded, I caved to the point of giving birth to stalagmites. Years of fence-sitting have led to a decisive leering leap.
One last bit of good news: At some point in the future, Vinnie wants to be able to install a 120GB hard drive along with the iMod. Samsung has already announced the drive; at most, availability is a matter of months.
Vinnie Rossi is about to offer an iMod for the iPod 5G in collaboration with Ken Ball of Audio Line Out. The joint project will involve both the iMod and a special product from ALO which will probably be called the iMod Cable. But wait: There's something else to celebrate.
Listeners will no longer have to choose between fidelity and portability. As Vinnie himself put it:
"The new modification will bypass the stock line-out components (opamp stage, coupling caps before and after the opamp, resistors/inductors in the signal path, tiny board traces) by taking the line-out signal directly from the Wolfson DAC and hard-wiring it to the line-out dock connector."
The second stage of the modification -- Black Gate caps, et al. -- will be incorporated into a line-out cable made by Ken Ball of ALO, which will allow Vinnie to give us both options: the iModded line out and the standard headphone out.
The cable prototype I saw from a distance looked to be a coruscating copper-colored weave, which didn't surprise me. Ken Ball began as an artist, and his audio line reflects his beginnings: Aesthetically, ALO cables occupy the place between function and heaven, where techie perfectionism and hand-crafted jewelry merge into sinuous glittering sculpture.
The sound? I didn't have the chance to listen on headphones, as the setup was central to the crowded room, but the 5G mod shone spectacularly through Omega 8" full range drivers and Vinnie's Signature 30. Diana Krall's piano bench squeaked audibly as her engineers caught the full range of the piano's dynamics and frequencies; the click of the upper harmonics complimented the bell-like partials just below them; runs swept the registers realistically; the pedal resonated with low notes that were felt as easily as heard, dispensing with the iPod's so-called bass issues once and for nonce.
The iMod 5G had that high sheen one associates with decent audiophile sources, but there was no hole in the center of the sound, nor was there any high-mid distortion (both issues plagued a third of the setups I listened to at HES -- the latter issue due to reps having no apparent understanding of gain structure). Vinnie also played a bit of dub-inflected acid jazz, as well as Shostakovich's 12th Quartet, which means he was one of the few demo reps at HES whose selections suggested he had taste in music as well as equipment. He also had the sense to keep the volume down.
The price for the 5G iMod has yet to be established, but Vinnie and Ken will be offering it next month. It will be available for both the 5 and 5.5G models. Until then, I'll be focused on the 4G iMod, which Vinnie will be completing for me next week. That's right -- after hearing how scintillating the iMod actually sounded, I caved to the point of giving birth to stalagmites. Years of fence-sitting have led to a decisive leering leap.
One last bit of good news: At some point in the future, Vinnie wants to be able to install a 120GB hard drive along with the iMod. Samsung has already announced the drive; at most, availability is a matter of months.