I have been looking to upgrade my NAD 542 CDP with something to match my newly acquired Musical fidelity M6 amp. Being new to hifi, but not music, I have been happy to listen to any advice wherever I can get (thanks WHF forum for this) one comment from a series audiophile was “this is the most important piece of kit to buy so make sure you do some serious listing before buying” So I went to two shops with a budget of £3k.
My intent was to listen to a number of CD players through high end kit to determine their capability then I would choose the best from each session to compare through my home kit. The first test was between
Cyrius CDxtse/DAC X - Linn Akurate --- Naim CDS3/XPS2
The Naim was the clear winner it just sounded so musical and together. I stopped listening to the various instruments in favour of the whole sound. Two or three times I reminded myself of this but kept getting draw into the music. However, this CDP is out of my price range and therefore had to go for my second choice which was the Linn. My only reservations here was that it sounded very clean almost technical, but the detail was very apparent and it shone when I put on Nickleback bringing the punch out from the guitars and drums beautifully.
The Second session I reviewed Ayon cd-1 and 2 and Musical fidelity M6. No competition here. The Ayon CD-2 put the music together like the Naim did and although it is still outside my budget the road test was worth pursuing further. The bass note piano sound on Spiegel im Speigel was just massive and emotive. Frankly it left the other two CD players for dead and yet both these CDP sounded terrific in their own right. So I now have a play off between the Ayon CD-2 and the Linn Akurate on my home kit.
My home kit is a Musical Fedelity M6 amp with Schonberg speakers. My nervousness was would the CDs react in the same way as they did in the shop. Test music ranged from classical (piano, choral and orchestra) to Pink Floyd, Metallica to Radiohead. Within the first few bars of Radiohead (when compared) it was obvious which one was the winner. The sound was as musical on my kit as it was in the shop. However, I have developed a theory that your ears just get used to the sounds and therefore can compensate for what you want to hear rather than what you are hearing. ( a bit like a smell in a room after a while it becomes unnoticeable) so I asked my teenage daughter to listen to the test. Again within a few bars her words were the sound on one player is bigger and just nicer to listen to. (her hifi is akin to an Awia) Through the range of music the Ayon was bigger, more musical and just so engaging.
So the Linn is going back and I will try to get the Ayon cd-2 at a price I can live with. As for the little NAD I have been previously using, well, even in an unfair contest with these two players it still did remarkably well, sure it lacked the detail and space of its two formidable adversaries but for a tenth of the price it showed what a fantastic player it is. So it will begin a new life in a different room along with the NAD amp.
regards
My intent was to listen to a number of CD players through high end kit to determine their capability then I would choose the best from each session to compare through my home kit. The first test was between
Cyrius CDxtse/DAC X - Linn Akurate --- Naim CDS3/XPS2
The Naim was the clear winner it just sounded so musical and together. I stopped listening to the various instruments in favour of the whole sound. Two or three times I reminded myself of this but kept getting draw into the music. However, this CDP is out of my price range and therefore had to go for my second choice which was the Linn. My only reservations here was that it sounded very clean almost technical, but the detail was very apparent and it shone when I put on Nickleback bringing the punch out from the guitars and drums beautifully.
The Second session I reviewed Ayon cd-1 and 2 and Musical fidelity M6. No competition here. The Ayon CD-2 put the music together like the Naim did and although it is still outside my budget the road test was worth pursuing further. The bass note piano sound on Spiegel im Speigel was just massive and emotive. Frankly it left the other two CD players for dead and yet both these CDP sounded terrific in their own right. So I now have a play off between the Ayon CD-2 and the Linn Akurate on my home kit.
My home kit is a Musical Fedelity M6 amp with Schonberg speakers. My nervousness was would the CDs react in the same way as they did in the shop. Test music ranged from classical (piano, choral and orchestra) to Pink Floyd, Metallica to Radiohead. Within the first few bars of Radiohead (when compared) it was obvious which one was the winner. The sound was as musical on my kit as it was in the shop. However, I have developed a theory that your ears just get used to the sounds and therefore can compensate for what you want to hear rather than what you are hearing. ( a bit like a smell in a room after a while it becomes unnoticeable) so I asked my teenage daughter to listen to the test. Again within a few bars her words were the sound on one player is bigger and just nicer to listen to. (her hifi is akin to an Awia) Through the range of music the Ayon was bigger, more musical and just so engaging.
So the Linn is going back and I will try to get the Ayon cd-2 at a price I can live with. As for the little NAD I have been previously using, well, even in an unfair contest with these two players it still did remarkably well, sure it lacked the detail and space of its two formidable adversaries but for a tenth of the price it showed what a fantastic player it is. So it will begin a new life in a different room along with the NAD amp.
regards