StanD
Headphoneus Supremus
- Joined
- Oct 2, 2013
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The Morley brand? ... With the built-in 60Hz hum?
Heck, that was a product feature.
The Morley brand? ... With the built-in 60Hz hum?
I think this. If black was available when I purchased, I woulda def went black. once you go black... =P
Hello Poland ,
How did you discover Asgard in Poland ? , I thought these Schiit Guys were a niche California thing that only the Old British Colonials would know about .
Tony in Michigan
ps. we have a superb Polish Dinner Place in : Cross Village , Michigan -- called : Legs , the place overlooks Lake Michigan , it's one of the finest Dinning Places in the State , it's a Resort kinda place , staffed by Poles from Chicago Area , seasonally .
From the sound of it, you might be waiting a really long time for that. Jason has said several times now that Loki demand isn't very high.I hope that with the release of the expensive Ygdrasil, Schiit won't forget about the affordable audio market. I'll be waiting for the Loki mkII with DSD256 for $149. That seems like a really good deal, and should sound great too.
Jason has said several times now that Loki demand isn't very high.
That's not surprising, I don't have any interest in the DSD64-limited Loki either. If Schiit enables dsd256 on the mkII version, and again, keeps the affordable price tag (or the price remains near the original level), they have my ear, and money.
Let the well-heeled audiophiles have their + $2000 Ygdrassils, and those who can't afford it, the 149$ DSD256 Loki mkII.
Do you actually have any DSD256 music? It's my understanding that that catalog is very limited.
The number of DSD128 and DSD256 releases appears to be growing, but I'm planning to upsample all my redbook CDs to DSD256 as well so the Loki mkII could play those too, and what's important without the brickwall filtering. For $149 (or close to it) this kind of solution looks like an absolute steal.
I think you might be assuming that there will be a Loki MKII a little too hard. Unless it was mentioned somewhere else or shown at RMAF and I didn't hear about it. I mean, I could be totally wrong and the Schiit guys are going to do it. It just doesn't sound like it from what Jason and Mike have said about their dislike of DSD.
Also, ripping from redbook CDs to DSD isn't going to make them sound better. They're already super compressed, nothing can bring back what they already don't have.
I only wanted to express my hope that Schiit won't abandon the affordable audio market, by limiting their offering to + $2000 components from now on.
I only wanted to express my hope that Schiit won't abandon the affordable audio market, by limiting their offering to + $2000 components from now on. A $149 DSD256 Loki mkII would offer great value for money, as far as the affordable audio components go. I doubt that anyone could top that Schiit at this price point.
P.S. Removing brickwall filtering from the CD playback makes redbook Cds sound better, there seems to be a general consensus on this one, which is a pretty rare thing to observe in the audio industry.
I doubt that a Loki Mk II is on the horizon given how poorly the Loki has sold ... maybe if you make it in black, Jason?
The color options are of no importance to me, as long as the Loki mkII has replaced the old AKM dac chip with the newer AK4490EQ which supports DSD256, and Schiit's own HQ low-pass filter. The modifications shouldn't cost that much, and that's why I think this Schiit would be hard to beat in this price range. Native DSD playback up to 11.298MHz for, say $179. Plus the freedom to use any third-party upsamplers for redbook upsampling. Who said that affordable components can't offer great SQ for the money. h34r: