Quote:
Originally posted by Flumpus
So would you suggest the HDCD and upsampling upgrades? |
I voted with my wallet, and my wallet said yes.
No, seriously. Get the upsampling option first. There's more of a return on your investment (it has an improving effect on more of your CD's). If/when you have US$160 to burn, then get the HDCD option. I don't know what it is, but I revisited my HDCD collection, and I noticed some sort of subconscious dislike of all of them. After I re-listened to them decoded, I liked them. This shouldn't be. I have no explanation. It could just be me. I am not saying that you will hear the same thing if/when you do a similar comparison (HDCD CD's decoded vs. undecoded). Quote:
I know you can't upsample and do HDCD decoding at the same time, so how does that work with only one option switch? If I turn the option switch off (I'm assuming that turns off upsampling), then play an HDCD, will the option light come on because it's using the HDCD decoder? |
Yes, exactly.
Also, I should mention that this is not necessarily the case, only the case in the MSB Tech Link DAC III...and most every other DAC in the known universe. The thing is, one
can decode entirely in the digital domain, but the only device that I know of that does this is Pacific Microsonics HDCD Processors I & II, and that costs thousands of dollars (I priced the old one once, the I, and I think it was like US$12K -- my wallet said "no" on that one). But it's just cheaper and easier to put the decoding right in the DAC chip, and that's where most manufacturers do this, including MSB Tech. I think this is an imposition by Pacific Microsonics, or maybe cost/technology/return/value/etc. in general.
I think Camelot is working on an upgrade that does the HDCD decoding before the upsampling. I think he said, "as long as I can do it all in one chip, and Pacific Microsonics just came out with such a chip", meaning he hadn't actually implemented it yet.
Also, there's an interesting little .pdf file on the HDCD site somewhere (somewhere under technical) about how they do it. It's basically similar to Dolby at a subtler level. It's a form of level dependent compression -- at low levels, it amplifies the signal, at high levels it attenuates. The HDCD decoder is constantly undoing this (in a HDCD encoded signal) in one of two ways, based on the LSB of the signal (the LSB spells out a pattern -- much like morse code -- in one of two ways, telling the decoder which filter to use).
So it doesn't make sense to me that I wouldn't like this. It sounds subtle and fairly transparent. Maybe I don't like the LSB, I don't know. It should be inaudible. I would not recommend you get it based on my experience. I would try to audition it for yourself.
Finally, the HDCD-capable DAC that comes with the HDCD upgrade (it basically
is the HDCD upgrade) is a slightly better DAC, so that would be another reason to get it. (But we're getting
really subtle now, even more so that HDCD.)
BTW, thomas, a couple minor niggles:
Oversampling doesn't interpolate zero's -- it interpolates the same value over and over again. Let's say you had 4x oversampling, and the incoming bitstream was like 1028, 1032, etc. then oversampling would deliver 1028, 1028, 1028, 1028, 1032, etc., whereas upsampling would interpolate different intermediate values for every value, after multiplying them by 2^8, of course. So something like: 1028*2^8, 1029*2^8, 1030*2^8, 1031*2^8, 1032*2^8 (actually, the intermediate values won't be exactly this, it depends on the surrounding signal, and what the upsampler interpolates those values to be; this was just an example). This is still wrong, though, and is therefore more incorrect than the 16/44.1 bitstream, as you correctly pointed out.
Also, I'm not sure it necessarily introduces distortion and jitter. It theoretically could remove jitter, depending on the superiority of its clock to that of the incoming digital stream. But you're right, theoretically it could go either way.
The rest of your post was pretty much right on.
PS You all can call me just "Dusty". Calling me "DustyChalk" is like me calling one of you "JohnSmith" or "MaryDoe". It sounds kind of formal and funny.