Apr 6, 2012 at 9:45 PM Post #136 of 389
Sorry, I missed this stuff before.
 
Quote:
Consider the false premise that because we have mechanical and electronic gear that can measure beyond certain audible limits that many people here seem to take that to mean that this same measurement gear accounts for everything the ear and brain hears or perceives.  Sloppy logic. That's an assumption many here make that you seem to have made as well.  The O2 displays ideal performance under the metrics established and accepted by many here.  Yet, with performance defined as ultimate transparency and wire w/ gain, the performance still falls short of other amps cheaper, equal to or more expensive than it though it does exceed many 'bad' or worse amps.  I'm not going to repeat which amps as those that bother reading will likely know which I refer to already and those that don't bother reading, for whatever reason, aren't worth repeating for.  Clean power delivery is superb for the price and size of the O2.  Transparency is only okay though and only great if compared to poor amps as reference.  Transparency being the ability to render or let whatever is on the recording or source pass through.  Despite the 'ideal' measurements clung to here, the O2 does not meet or exceed the best amps available and still leaves out some information on the recording.  So maybe somebody should ask why and figure it out rather than resting on false laurels and the illusion of epistemological omniscience.
 
While we're at it, let's examine two things.  First, V claims the O2 in not discernible from the DAC1 from his tests.  Let's see the Youtube video of him and Nick Charles conducting his own challenge to support his claim.  A claim which is basically a summation of all his claims and work thus far.  He can submit his transducer, source and track choice to me or purrin for approval as well as Nick Charles' methodology to ensure listener familiarity and listening fatigue reduction protocols.  He can even keep his money in his pocket or donate it regardless of his own challenge and its outcome.
 
Second, I'd like V to ask the designer of the Benchmark DAC1 whether he thinks the O2 sounds exactly like the DAC1 HO.  If not, why?  What did V do wrong that his measurements failed to account for?  If it does, then how does he explain V meeting his products performance for so much less than his likely costs and market price?  With the ODAC and O2 being perfect wire w/ gain and transparent beyond audible limits, why would anyone want or need a DAC1?  I'd tune in to the blog for that interview.

 
---- First part is response to top section ----
 
Based on just the measurement data, which is done with equipment with very high accuracy, I agree it's a stretch to conclude that this accounts for everything the ear and brain hears or perceives.  However, what I'd say you're ignoring is the large body of evidence supporting the claim that extremely small differences in sound are impossible for humans to perceive.  There are many studies employing controlled listening, where people were in fact not able to discern very small differences; sometimes the differences are those that many audiophiles say should be apparent.  I think it's also common sense and intuitive for most people, that two objects machined to be the same size might look so similar that people couldn't tell them apart by looking, that two batches of food processed by the same factory might be so similar as to be indistinguishable by taste (yet they may appear to taste significantly differently based on your mood, what you previously just ate, and what aspects you were focusing on), and so on.  The same should hold true for two audio samples as well, as demonstrated by all those previous studies.
 
You don't need to account for every single factor to make claims that are most probably correct, based on the current understanding of electrical theory, psychoacoustics, and so on.
 
I think there are two key unintuitive notions to overcome:
(1) that two significantly different electronic circuit designs (audio or not) can have extremely similar performance characteristics in certain relevant ways -- I think a stronger background in EE would help here
(2) that our senses and perceptions, which serve us so well in so many circumstances, can be unreliable -- I think being a superhuman would help here 
wink.gif

 
 
The question is then about whether or not the O2 or any other amps are at the level where they're sufficiently close to the ideal.  Personally, I'm not going to say I'm 100% certain that the O2 is at this level, because I'm no expert in pscychoacoustics, so I'm just parroting the 0.005% and whatever thresholds that seem to have been established.  And even if those have been established by previous studies, maybe they're wrong.  Also, I think it's possible but very unlikely (based on an interpretation of systems theory), that an amp could perform as well as the O2 with all the measurements V checked, yet somehow behave significantly worse with some other kind of audio input and headphone load.  The more linear an amp is--which the low distortion figures point to--the more it should probably behave like an ideal LTI system and thus have a very predictable and close to ideal input/output relationship, no matter what the input.
 
Again, this is a real-world system, so performance is going to depend slightly on the temperature, the electricity from the wall, the positions of every individual electron in the room (which are unknown obviously), and so on.  Nothing behaves exactly like the textbook theory, but is it close enough?
 
As far as I can tell, your conclusion that the O2 does not achieve "wire with gain" performance, is based on your own listening, maybe the listening of others, and maybe some other factors.  Correct me if I'm wrong.  As far as reputable academic publications are concerned, this is not very convincing evidence.  Furthermore, it's less convincing IMHO than the kinds of evidence and theories I and others have been pointing towards.  Again, if listening conditions are not controlled very carefully, even well-trained listeners can exhibit consistently biased tendencies.  As one quick example:
http://seanolive.blogspot.com/2009/04/dishonesty-of-sighted-audio-product.html
 
 
---- Now this is the response to the two bottom paragraphs posted ---
 
Regarding V's listening test, he's already said that he (and others) did it.  I wouldn't take negative blind listening results too seriously from somebody not expecting to hear differences, anyway.  For all you know, he could be intentionally sandbagging.
 
As for Benchmark's side, it would be interesting to see their response.  I wouldn't be confident in a 100% honest and straightforward answer though, as they have products to sell.  That said, much of the cost of the DAC1 goes to profits, R&D costs, the DAC and all of its functionality, and so on.  Furthermore, regarding the DAC1 HO, it is co-located next to noisy digital electronics, which gives it a disadvantage compared to the O2.  Furthermore, the output power levels into lower impedances seem to be higher than the O2 can deliver.  Also, the output impedance seems to be much lower, though arguably it seems like the O2's is already low enough?  These extra abilities and features above the O2, require a more complicated or expensive design.
 
The O2's core design is stupidly simple and seems to represent pretty much the best you can do with that kind of effort and cheap parts.  It's pretty much the simplest thing you can do that's not a CMoy.  The achievement of the O2 is in recognizing that stupidly simple designs can have good performance, putting in the hard work in terms of the PCB layout and components to optimize the design, choosing the correct cheap parts instead of the most fashionable ones that may perform worse, and doing everything with the constraints that it must run off of batteries and use all through-hole components.
 
 
P.S.  For the record, I think some arguments being made on both sides are overstepping their bounds and need to be reworked.
 
 
Apr 6, 2012 at 10:40 PM Post #137 of 389
The best thing about this amp to me was the build process. I've got some decent soldering experience from guitars and guitar pedals so I figured why not try a headphone amp? Had it built in about 2 hours and passed all the tests the first time around with no issues, plus the moments of hearing sound come through something you just built is pretty cool. The downside? I'm now going to wind up blowing a lot of money on a new soldering iron and many other DIY projects. Dang you headphones and headphone gear, you're so expensive yet so fun.
 
Apr 7, 2012 at 7:34 AM Post #138 of 389
Interesting thread!
May as well subscribe!
popcorn.gif

 
Apr 7, 2012 at 10:14 PM Post #139 of 389
Apr 7, 2012 at 10:30 PM Post #140 of 389
Until the ODAC, but I guess that will be it's own thread.
 
Apr 8, 2012 at 1:25 AM Post #141 of 389
Maybe there will be more buzz about the ODAC when more specs and descriptions come in, rather than just the April 1st data.
 
At least one thing people can agree on regarding the O2 is that the noise level is really low, and about the only things we know so far about the ODAC is that it seems to have a low noise level as well.  What kinds of DACs and amps do people with custom IEMs and other high-end IEMs use, anyway?  If anything, it seems like the ODAC and ODA (with supposedly more gain options) may benefit those users most.  Too bad the O2 isn't particularly wearable.
 
I'm still waiting on a miniaturized cheap Chinese O2 clone with lithium-ion batteries and SMT parts to show up somewhere...
 
Apr 8, 2012 at 2:02 AM Post #142 of 389


Quote:
What kinds of DACs and amps do people with custom IEMs and other high-end IEMs use, anyway?


Ummm.....Leckerton UHA6S w/ OPA209s.  Nokia N8 as transport via USBOTG.  I'm curious about the ODAC but rather skeptical, especially w/ the lack of transparency.  No pun intended.  Even if the ODAC outperformed the Cirrus in the Leckerton I still wouldn't use the O2 amp due to lack of resolution for the ES5 and UERM.
 
 
Apr 8, 2012 at 3:39 AM Post #143 of 389


Quote:
Ummm.....Leckerton UHA6S w/ OPA209s.  Nokia N8 as transport via USBOTG.  I'm curious about the ODAC but rather skeptical, especially w/ the lack of transparency.  No pun intended.  Even if the ODAC outperformed the Cirrus in the Leckerton I still wouldn't use the O2 amp due to lack of resolution for the ES5 and UERM.
 

Resolution?, May I ask what are you referring to?
 
Apr 8, 2012 at 3:46 AM Post #144 of 389
Well thanks for that response, Anax.  I've never really been in that market, so it was ignorance speaking; I really don't have much of a clue here.  Anyhow, I was already aware of the Leckerton Audio products, but what other alternatives are popular?
 
Regarding the Leckertons, which I've not tried, I can at least admire the willingness to divulge useful specs, the form factor, and the physical design.  That's more than can be said about most out there.  Just by the given specs it looks like ODAC + O2 or ODA may do slightly better, but it's still in the range I would say (and V would probably say) shouldn't matter.  Certainly they look better than most products out there.  It's really about the features, size, form factor, 24-bit over USB vs. just 16-bit, power for fullsize headphones, and cost.  Tradeoffs again.
 
 
P.S. Any response to spoilers now or sometime later, or do you prefer we just give it a rest?
 
Apr 8, 2012 at 3:57 AM Post #145 of 389
I use a Leckerton UHA-4 because I can't get by without crossfeed.  It also corrects for the undersized coupling caps in my Cowon D2+ and gives low Z loads their bass back. I usually listen pretty quietly too so the stepped volume is a plus.  I mostly use the UHA-4 with IEMs at the office or otherwise out of the house.
 
The O2 is basically my desktop amp and I mostly use it with my T50RPs and K601s.  Its great for those but I need lots of isolation at the office with requires IEMs and Pandora One is my main source of music there so I have to use a hardware crossfeed which rules out setting up my O2 there to use with my full size 'phones.
 
Apr 8, 2012 at 4:38 AM Post #146 of 389
This is relevant to my interests
 
Apr 8, 2012 at 5:47 AM Post #147 of 389


Quote:
Resolution?, May I ask what are you referring to?


Really?  The ability to be transparent and render as much data as possible on a given track.
 
Quote:
Well thanks for that response, Anax.  I've never really been in that market, so it was ignorance speaking; I really don't have much of a clue here.  Anyhow, I was already aware of the Leckerton Audio products, but what other alternatives are popular?
 
Fiio, Hifiman, iBasso, CEntrance.  Fiios are priced right but just fall short against competitors in absolute performance terms.  Hifiman, well...I don't think anything they currently offer is up your alley wrt price or performance/philosophy.  iBasso, none of their amps did much for me and hearing that the O2 was better than the amp on the DX100 sealed the deal against that device for me since it would still need an amp based on my preferences.  CEntrance has a better DAC section than the Leckerton, no doubt.  But the Leckerton UHA6 bests the CEntrance amp section quite handily.  The best was the CEntrance DACPort LX w/o the amp running into the UHA6S via LO but the size, complexity and cost wasn't worth the gain for me just running the UHA6S at the time especially since I wanted to use my phone as a digital transport.  The CEntrance can't be self powered, the Leckerton is.  So no USB on the go for the DACPort.  All my comments are purely about transparency and not FR or sonic preferences.  Also wrt the 209 opamps, the 8610 is not transparent enough for me in the UHA6 topolgy and too audiophile sounding with a very slight treble and bass 'excitement' not to my tastes in an amp.  I also don't know what the UHA6SII will sound like but I hope to have a review sample to compare at some point.  So there's a lot of popular stuff out there, a lot of underperforming popular stuff.       
 
Regarding the Leckertons, which I've not tried, I can at least admire the willingness to divulge useful specs, the form factor, and the physical design.  That's more than can be said about most out there.  Just by the given specs it looks like ODAC + O2 or ODA may do slightly better, but it's still in the range I would say (and V would probably say) shouldn't matter.  Certainly they look better than most products out there.  It's really about the features, size, form factor, 24-bit over USB vs. just 16-bit, power for fullsize headphones, and cost.  Tradeoffs again.
 
No idea how the ODAC will sound but if it is better than the Leckerton it would need a better amp than the O2 as that would be the bottleneck regardless of the measurements.  Using the PS Audio PWD the O2 is a bottleneck compared to the UHA6S w/ 209s and the Super7 and BA.  That's with all that tube distortion that seems to be revealing more information on the recordings than the O2 can reveal w/ it's low noise floor.  Go figure.  So even if the ODAC was better than the Leckerton's, which would be great, I would never put it in the O2.  That only makes sense on paper for me and paper isn't jiving w/ my ears in this case.  
 
 
 
P.S. Any response to spoilers now or sometime later, or do you prefer we just give it a rest?
 
The spoilers are just to offset the rampant zealotry on the part of some for the sake of those new to the whole debate who might be easily susceptible.  I've given my thoughts on issues like the Carver 'tests' and other supposed 'evidence' over and over again for years now.  I'm sorry if you missed it.  I'm really not too interested in riding the same merry go round that never seems to stop spinning while new people w/ the ame arguments seem to get on and off except for me (I don't mean you btw Mike).  Not to say that's how it is for me alone, but that is how it's been for me.  Then some unstable person will straw man something I say and try to get the last jab in like some troll conquering hero leading to a thread meltdown and inevitable lock w/ the usual mod PMs.  No thanks, Groundhog Day has gotten old.  If you want to continue via PM we can try but the bottom line is the 'evidence' as you see it is sufficient for you whereas it is insufficient and inherently flawed for me.  I'd rather not crap all over Mav's thread or perpetuate the usual nonsense that I'm sure we are both familiar with.  FYI, I've heard phones burn-in for the worse over time, heard expensive cables that suck, expensive gear that was crap, returned expensive opamps in favor of cheaper ones, and bought my UHA6S due to it's 30 day moneyback w/ the expectation of debunking it as hype and FOTM.  When I was infatuated by the LCD2 r.1 and HE6 based on Head-fi impressions I expected them to be my thing as an ortho fan only to be sorely disappointed.  I reluctantly sampled the overpriced, plasticky, bass light, thin and treble tipped HD800 only to find out they weren't once I plugged them into the right chain and responded well to mods w/o sacrificing technical performance.  I use a dB meter and do my best to match gains too.  So if anyone wants to suggest I hear more information on a recording because my amp has a cooler shade of black or a shinier LED best of luck w/ that.  If someone thinks I 'must' like a 'colored' sound from poorly designed or implemented gear and that I have no idea of what accurate or neutral sound is, my HP2 and UERM beg to differ.  Do some/many people delude themselves w/ cost, placebo and other variables?  Yes.  Does that explain away everything perceived as an audible difference?  No.  When I can hear someone walking in the background of a studio during a recording session and whether a song was re-mastered from a tape or something else, to call that a figment of my imagination or some placebo effect is a bit of stretch.  Personal experience is not always a matter of mysterious divine inspiration or psychological delusions.  I'm not going to give up driving and take the subway because I visited this website: http://www.michaelbach.de/ot/ .  Many here seem to have done just that. 
 
 
 



 
 
Apr 8, 2012 at 10:46 PM Post #149 of 389


Quote:
Really?  The ability to be transparent and render as much data as possible on a given track.
 


 

Sorry, but what you and mikeaj say sound's a little to much like bias, if the gear were to perform at a certain level then it's only holdbacks would be the performance of the other gear, the two V designs measure levels of distortion and such below .01% which is the threshold of inaudibility traduced to -85 dB
 

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