Themilkman46290
1000+ Head-Fier
Ad8066,ad825,opa2134,opa2132,ad823,muses8920,lt1364,opa827,lme6172, the ad825 and 823 would be my favorites aftar the v5i and lme49710haWhat other opamps did you compare those with?
Ad8066,ad825,opa2134,opa2132,ad823,muses8920,lt1364,opa827,lme6172, the ad825 and 823 would be my favorites aftar the v5i and lme49710haWhat other opamps did you compare those with?
One pair of SS V6 duals costs about 130 USD, a pair of dual Sparkos costs 160 USD and a pair of Sonic Imagery 994Enh-Ticha Dual 188 USD! So, quite expensive, although the Burson still provides the "cheapest" high-end solid-state opamps, after all.
BTW, I asked once NJR/JRC why the MUSES01/02 are so expensive? They nicely told me that it's not just a simple marketing gimmick, but more related to the production costs, because MUSES01/02 (and newer 03) are manufactured on their own dedicated production line, apart from regular opamps, and using a different Q&A process. All of the above are delaying a lot the time to manufacture each of these products, hence the much increased price.
A well-designed DAC or amplifier, with a very good ground plane and a low-noise power supply should perform admirable with most audio , starting from NE5532/5534 (also, I recommend JRC5532DD/JRC5534DD, which outperforms the NE5532/NE5534 in all aspects) to OPA1622, OPA627, AD797 or similar.
Let's call this...frugality, OK?like I said I’m cheap
I bought a multimeter but don’t know how to use it. Is there one you can recommend that checks everything (that’s preferably “frugal”).
I think it’s fun to learn more about this stuff but there are definitely a lot of fits and triumphs along the way.
If it's a RMS-multimeter, then you could measure the AC output voltage when feeding the DAC or amp with 0dB (or -1dB) 1KHz sinewave. Usually around 2V RMS for DACs and more voltage for headamps, of course.
Also, DC-output voltage could get measured as well, no music connected, no cables connected to RCA/XLR/jack inputs. Usually if lower than 3mV of DC voltage should be fine for most 16-32 cans; for 300-600 Ohms cans it could be higher, but not more than 10-20mV.
You could get a cheap ADC like the one built-into ASUS U7, but also a cheap Behringer UMC204 or Focusrite have a good ADC inside too. Then you can start doing some RMAA and ARTA test too.
Basically, with the above simple tools you could identify some flaws in the audio equipment and, why not, some differences between opamps (when swapping them). For more in-depth analysis you need something else, at least QA401 from Quantasylum.
Yes, why not? As long as it's not oscillating I don't see any issue.What your thoughts about on the AD8620??? Is it a good idea to put it in lpf???
Yes, why not? As long as it's not oscillating I don't see any issue.
Worth mentioning that AD797 (single) and the newer OPA1612 (dual) are extremely low-noise opamps and for high-gain stages (like voltage amplification) might really worth a try. Also, the I/V stage could be tested as well.