Benefit of a streamer?

Page 8 - Seeking answers? Join the What HiFi community: the world's leading independent guide to buying and owning hi-fi and home entertainment products.

oldric_naubhoff

New member
Mar 11, 2011
23
0
0
Visit site
CnoEvil said:
IMO. SQ may be effected by:

- How successfully the processing / filtering is done.

- To what extent the PC polutes the signal..

- How well the clocking is handled.

- Quality of the power supply.

- How successfully the components are isolated.

all your points above relate to engineering quality af accompanying DAC. it all has nothing to do with any PC. all you need is a DAC with galvanicaly isolated USB input supporting asynchronous data transfer. that should cover your points 2,3 and 5. points 1 and 4 don't need comment in this context IMO. when you have the DAC side sorted then all you need is to make sure your PC outputs bit perfect signal. and that is the hardest thing as PCs weren't designed to stream unprocessed musical data. that surely needs some tweaking therefore IMO PC as a transport is a solution for more computer savvy people. streamers are great for people who want ease of use and least amount of fiddling with settings as possible. I think I now found my media centre PC so will not be getting bothered going the streamer route, which I considered as I couldn't find acceptable looking PC before. higher versatility and flexibility of a PC over a streamer makes the whole decision a no brainer for me. CNO tell me, what will you do with your Linn if DSD dowloads become standard in the near future? something that indeed seems to be happening now?
 

CnoEvil

New member
Aug 21, 2009
556
14
0
Visit site
oldric_naubhoff said:
all your points above relate to engineering quality af accompanying DAC. it all has nothing to do with any PC. all you need is a DAC with galvanicaly isolated USB input supporting asynchronous data transfer. that should cover your points 2,3 and 5. points 1 and 4 don't need comment in this context IMO. when you have the DAC side sorted then all you need is to make sure your PC outputs bit perfect signal. and that is the hardest thing as PCs weren't designed to stream unprocessed musical data. that surely needs some tweaking therefore IMO PC as a transport is a solution for more computer savvy people. streamers are great for people who want ease of use and least amount of fiddling with settings as possible. I think I now found my media centre PC so will not be getting bothered going the streamer route, which I considered as I couldn't find acceptable looking PC before. higher versatility and flexibility of a PC over a streamer makes the whole decision a no brainer for me. CNO tell me, what will you do with your Linn if DSD dowloads become standard in the near future? something that indeed seems to be happening now?

No they don't.

- The PC has moving parts (motors / fans etc) which can introduce pollution eg. EMI

- As Busb has said, if the PC is doing other tasks, it may effect things.

- A PC has no form of clock, so the DAC ideally needs to be an asynchronous...which may, or may not work out as well as a single Master Clock..

- IMO. The Power supply makes a difference, even in the transport.

ATM. DSD is no more of an issue for me, than CDs are for someone who listens to Vinyl. I have a fairly good collection of 16 and 24 bit music, and if something that comes along that is a "game-changer", I will then consider it.

All of Linn's streamers can be improved through software updates, and most have a modular design that are often up-gradable eg. Dynamik power supply, and the way the ADS / KDS could get a new board to bring them up to the /1 version.....even giving you the option of getting a Renew version from the old board (which could be kept or sold on).

The only point that I'm trying to make, is that there are a lot of assumptions flying about, and very little actual experimentation......I just want people to try both options before shelling out the dosh.
 

BronC

New member
Jun 26, 2010
10
0
0
Visit site
I did experiment with using a laptop as a source. I wanted it to stream 192x24 bit files bit perfectly to my DAC without aly SQ issues. I could not do it without buying a lot of extra equipment to handle the 192x24 streaming which does not come as standard in cheaper lap-tops. I could not stop the occational disruption to the sound because even if you switch everything off you can - there are still some things that kick in and take-up the processor. For example - if you try searching for the next piece of music whilst something is playing it needs to have most of the PC services enabled.

I realised all I was doing was building a streamer.

I bought a streamer and use the lap-top to surf the net as I listen to my 192x24 bit music perfectly
 

BenLaw

Well-known member
Nov 21, 2010
475
7
18,895
Visit site
CnoEvil said:
- The PC has moving parts (motors / fans etc) which can introduce pollution eg. EMI

As has been pointed out, you can get PCs with SSD and no fans.

- As Busb has said, if the PC is doing other tasks, it may effect things.

If the output is bit perfect, it is bit perfect.

- A PC has no form of clock, so the DAC ideally needs to be an asynchronous...which may, or may not work out as well as a single Master Clock..

Jitter (the negative effect re a clock) can be measured. There are long-standing studies showing the levels of jitter that are detectable by humans, and any properly functioning dac will have lower levels of jitter than this.

- IMO. The Power supply makes a difference, even in the transport.

If the output is bit perfect, why?
 

CnoEvil

New member
Aug 21, 2009
556
14
0
Visit site
@ Ben

- I am not really talking about what you can get, but things to bear in mind.......this issue is not as simple as "get any laptop and stick a DAC on it".

- I only mentioned the Clock / Jitter as something to take into consideration. DCS feel it's so important that they give the option of a separate clock which makes a positive improvement when added.

- I have heard a power supply make a difference, but I'm not qualified to fully answer your question. The upgraded Dynamik Switch Mode P/S on the Linn DS made a huge difference. I've also heard different Transports sound different.

All I'm trying to do is throw out "food for thought", rather than making any absolutist statements.
 

BenLaw

Well-known member
Nov 21, 2010
475
7
18,895
Visit site
Fair enough, and my comments are not personal, simply trying to further the debate. Btw, I know DCS have a separate clock available - expensive isn't it? ;)

Re the Linn DS, what does the power supply supply power to? Is it just the 'source' or also the dac?
 

busb

Well-known member
Jun 14, 2011
84
6
18,545
Visit site
BenLaw said:
CnoEvil said:
- The PC has moving parts (motors / fans etc) which can introduce pollution eg. EMI

As has been pointed out, you can get PCs with SSD and no fans.

- As Busb has said, if the PC is doing other tasks, it may effect things.

If the output is bit perfect, it is bit perfect.

- A PC has no form of clock, so the DAC ideally needs to be an asynchronous...which may, or may not work out as well as a single Master Clock..

Jitter (the negative effect re a clock) can be measured. There are long-standing studies showing the levels of jitter that are detectable by humans, and any properly functioning dac will have lower levels of jitter than this.

- IMO. The Power supply makes a difference, even in the transport.

If the output is bit perfect, why?

I can output a "bitperfect" stream from my Sony Vaio laptop into my DAC plastered in bloody noise being conducted along the connection from the Sony's SMPS. When I run the Sony exclusively off its battery - no noise. People get really hung up on bit perfection. If someone is running a USB DAC into headphones where the volume is controlled within the player - the output stream is no longer bit perfect!

Bit Perfect is a Red Herring!

I asked on PFM why galvanic isolation wan't built into DACs. The 1st reply was from John Westlake suggesting is just introduced RFI inside the DAC chasis. It is possible & some DACs don't suffer but he was implying it was a lot easier to to use an external isolator.
 

CnoEvil

New member
Aug 21, 2009
556
14
0
Visit site
BenLaw said:
CnoEvil said:
BenLaw said:
Re the Linn DS, what does the power supply supply power to? Is it just the 'source' or also the dac?

The Box. :? :shifty:

Which includes a dac, so this point was not relevant to your comment about power supplies on a computer, which is just the source / transport.

IMO. Anything that cleans up the mains will help in all areas. Linn's explanation is here: http://www.linn.co.uk/all-products/upgrades/dynamik
 

oldric_naubhoff

New member
Mar 11, 2011
23
0
0
Visit site
hey CNO. I don't want to turn it into PC vs. streamer knockout. it's just you're using really demagogic arguments fuled with prejudice? in the end a streamer is nothing else but a stripped down computer designed to perform a single task.

CnoEvil said:
- The PC has moving parts (motors / fans etc) which can introduce pollution eg. EMI

even if fans and motors could induce EMI pollution into PC's circuitry and even if it was harmful to digital data integrity you sill can get a passively colled PC if you want to. no moving part inside. just loads of heat tunnels and heat sinks just like in a class A amp. in this case your argument is redundant.

CnoEvil said:
- As Busb has said, if the PC is doing other tasks, it may effect things.

you're forgetting the fact a PC is designed to perform multitude of tasks silmuteinously. not to mention processing power in a compuer is few magnitudes higher than in any streamer you could find around. meaning; it will not stress much a PC to play music and so something else. for instance in my ancient laptop I had the first generation dual core laptop processor. I guess it's around 1.6GHz per core. CPU usage rarely exceeded 5% in normal use. I could only hear it works hard when I was playing 3D graphics games.

CnoEvil said:
- A PC has no form of clock, so the DAC ideally needs to be an asynchronous...which may, or may not work out as well as a single Master Clock..

but there is a single "Master Clock" in case of asynchronous data transfer. the one fitted in your DAC. in this configuration the PC only sends on the bits. and USB 2.0 spec offer a few magnitudes more bandwidth than what is needed to transfer even the highest resolution audio file.

CnoEvil said:
- IMO. The Power supply makes a difference, even in the transport.

what you mean by that? the power supply can pollute the signal? I already told you galvanic isolation solves it. or is that power supply also influences data flow? computing accuracy?
 

CnoEvil

New member
Aug 21, 2009
556
14
0
Visit site
@ Olderic

Have you heard a decent streamer?

I am not trying to argue at all, but am, to some degree, playing "Devil's Advocate" in order to show it's not as simple as it might first appear ie. by throwing out possible factors that may effect the sound quality if not correctly addressed (by either solution).
 

CnoEvil

New member
Aug 21, 2009
556
14
0
Visit site
oldric_naubhoff said:
CnoEvil said:
Have you heard a decent streamer?

have you heard a well sorted audio oriented PC feeding to a capable DAC? oh wait a second! isn't it what your Linn really is? there's no magic about what Linn is doing.

Yes........I've heard a DCS Debussy and a Bel Canto Dac fed by a well sorted PC.

I've even tried the DCS Debussy and Audio Note 2.1x signature fed by my Linn DS.

As I keep saying, I am only trying to be thought provoking in order to encourage people to go and listen for themselves, and take it from there.....as my subjective opinion is no more than that.....ie.personal.
 

ngibbs

New member
Jun 12, 2010
48
0
0
Visit site
WishTree said:
Wow.. I think I managed to read most of this thread and hopefully I will be able to mark what I write below for future bookmark.

Until recently, I was living in the same world that I would not need a dedicated Streamer / Player and my Mac Mini does a great job! I have put an SSD in it and upgraded the RAM to 4GB on 2011 Mac Mini so everything is as per the needed specs. Music is played through iTunes.

However with Oppo BDP 105 acting as DAC or player / streamer (from NAS), I was able to see the differences. Mac Mini sounded thin and not right compared to Oppo playing directly from NAS (NAS acting as a Network Hard Disk). I had to fiddle settings on Mac Mini (Audio Midi Set Up), then installed Amarra software to ensure that everything is bit perfect and then the differences went away. I am now enjoying the 'fiddle free' 'assured SQ' from Oppo rather than remembering or checking if all the things are in place on Mac Mini to ensure that the output is really BIT PERFECT (?).

Coming back to difference in SQ by playing iTunes as is vs Amarra is a bit of debate for some but it is very apparent on my system. If I do not use iTunes and run music from XBMC (No Amarra) the sound is same as Oppo playing directly

As of today, with a substantial investment into the HiFi set up and if it is especially only digital, I would check out the streamer / player options to see if there is any added convenience or enhanced (observable) SQ.

I would agree with you that iTunes without something bolted on (BitPerfect, Amara, Pure etc.) doesn't sound very good.
 
ngibbs said:
WishTree said:
Coming back to difference in SQ by playing iTunes as is vs Amarra is a bit of debate for some but it is very apparent on my system.

I would agree with you that iTunes without something bolted on (BitPerfect, Amara, Pure etc.) doesn't sound very good.

I'd be very interested if you could describe what improvement you hear with, say, Amarra, over straight iTunes. And do all versions sound the same?
 

amcluesent

New member
Mar 8, 2009
25
0
0
Visit site
I'm sure that a PC can produce a bit-perfect S/PDIF feed up to 24/192 into a DAC, as can a dedicated streamer. But a reasnable amount of knowledge of Windows/Mac is needed to ensure no resampling etc.

Usabilty of a good dedicated music streamer is far, far better. UPnP AV Streamer, usability as bad as the PC.
 

ngibbs

New member
Jun 12, 2010
48
0
0
Visit site
nopiano said:
ngibbs said:
WishTree said:
Coming back to difference in SQ by playing iTunes as is vs Amarra is a bit of debate for some but it is very apparent on my system.

I would agree with you that iTunes without something bolted on (BitPerfect, Amara, Pure etc.) doesn't sound very good.

I'd be very interested if you could describe what improvement you hear with, say, Amarra, over straight iTunes. And do all versions sound the same?

I'm afraid I'm not very good at describing these things (not a cop out I can assure you). More detail, greater 'presence', sharper? I've only had experience with BitPerfect and Pure and all I can say is that I probably wouldn't listen to iTunes if it weren't for the bolted-on software. Maybe it's something to do with the unforgiving nature (I'm told) of my DAC. The difference between the two I couldn't say (I've stuck with BitPerfect and I'm happy with it).
 
ngibbs said:
nopiano said:
I'd be very interested if you could describe what improvement you hear with, say, Amarra, over straight iTunes. And do all versions sound the same?

I'm afraid I'm not very good at describing these things (not a cop out I can assure you). More detail, greater 'presence', sharper? I've only had experience with BitPerfect and Pure and all I can say is that I probably wouldn't listen to iTunes if it weren't for the bolted-on software. Maybe it's something to do with the unforgiving nature (I'm told) of my DAC. The difference between the two I couldn't say (I've stuck with BitPerfect and I'm happy with it).

OK, that's fair enough. But since you are using an external DAC, how are the bits becoming better-sounding? Or am I missing summat here? (I could understand if it gave a better analogue output)
 

ngibbs

New member
Jun 12, 2010
48
0
0
Visit site
nopiano said:
ngibbs said:
nopiano said:
I'd be very interested if you could describe what improvement you hear with, say, Amarra, over straight iTunes. And do all versions sound the same?

I'm afraid I'm not very good at describing these things (not a cop out I can assure you). More detail, greater 'presence', sharper? I've only had experience with BitPerfect and Pure and all I can say is that I probably wouldn't listen to iTunes if it weren't for the bolted-on software. Maybe it's something to do with the unforgiving nature (I'm told) of my DAC. The difference between the two I couldn't say (I've stuck with BitPerfect and I'm happy with it).

OK, that's fair enough. But since you are using an external DAC, how are the bits becoming better-sounding? Or am I missing summat here? (I could understand if it gave a better analogue output)

Again, I'm probably not the best person to ask. If it really is all just bits (and pieces), why does my Sonos not sound that great (tbh) compared to my Mac with BitPerfect? Same DAC, noticeably different sound. The software is supposed to reduce iTunes 'intervention' (I'm told). That's about as much as I know.
 
T

the record spot

Guest
bigboss said:
nopiano said:
manicm said:
I still maintain, if at some point you build a hi-res library a standalone streamer is the way to go, otherwise you'll be doing a lot of faffing on a PC. I too don't disagree that in SQ terms there may be no difference, but personally I'd be more comfy without a PC.

I agree 100%.

+2

Or you get something like Onkyo's TX8050, use its' many inputs or network capabilities and go from there. Simples.
 

steve_1979

Well-known member
Jul 14, 2010
231
10
18,795
Visit site
Hope you don't mind if I expand on a few points that you made earlier Cno. :)

CnoEvil said:
- The PC has moving parts (motors / fans etc) which can introduce pollution eg. EMI

If you're referring to the analogue output of a computer then yes I agree with you wholeheartedly. The inside of a computer is very 'EMI noisy' which can have a noticable effect on the sound quality. In some of the worst cases that I've heard you can even hear clicking or humming noises from a computers analogue output.

However EMI only effects the analogue output. EMI does not have any effect on the digital output from a computer at all. So if you're using an external DAC plugged into a digital output of a computer the sound quality will be completely uneffected by any EMI inside the computer case.

Also, many of the top of the range internal PC soundcards such as the Asus Xonar Essence STX have an EMI shield covering the analogue output section of the DAC which works very effectively. I've built several PCs over the years and in my experience the analogue output sound quality from a high end EMI shielded soundcard is every bit as good as the sound quality that you get from expensive hifi DACs.

CnoEvil said:
- As Busb has said, if the PC is doing other tasks, it may effect things.

Modern processors are very fast and are designed to be able to perform multiple tasks at once so this isn't an issue. As Ben said earlier "If it's bit perfect then it's bit perfect" simple as that.

CnoEvil said:
- A PC has no form of clock, so the DAC ideally needs to be an asynchronous...which may, or may not work out as well as a single Master Clock..

1. A small amount of jitter is inaudiable anyway so it's not really an issue to start with (I've done the listening tests and you'd be suprised by just how much jitter is needed before it becomes audiable).

2. Most modern DACs will reclock the digital audio stream and remove any jitter before converting it to an analogue signal anyway. So even if there is a bit of jitter going into the DAC there still won't be any jitter coming out of it.

3. Some DACs are able to synchronise the computer with their clock when they're connected via a USB cable. This means that there will be no jitter at all to start with.
 

busb

Well-known member
Jun 14, 2011
84
6
18,545
Visit site
steve_1979 said:
Hope you don't mind if I expand on a few points that you made earlier Cno. :)

CnoEvil said:
- The PC has moving parts (motors / fans etc) which can introduce pollution eg. EMI

If you're referring to the analogue output of a computer then yes I agree with you wholeheartedly. The inside of a computer is very 'EMI noisy' which can have a noticable effect on the sound quality. In some of the worst cases that I've heard you can even hear clicking or humming noises from a computers analogue output.

However EMI only effects the analogue output. EMI does not have any effect on the digital output from a computer at all. So if you're using an external DAC plugged into a digital output of a computer the sound quality will be completely uneffected by any EMI inside the computer case.

Also, many of the top of the range internal PC soundcards such as the Asus Xonar Essence STX have an EMI shield covering the analogue output section of the DAC which works very effectively. I've built several PCs over the years and in my experience the analogue output sound quality from a high end EMI shielded soundcard is every bit as good as the sound quality that you get from expensive hifi DACs.

CnoEvil said:
- As Busb has said, if the PC is doing other tasks, it may effect things.

Modern processors are very fast and are designed to be able to perform multiple tasks at once so this isn't an issue. As Ben said earlier "If it's bit perfect then it's bit perfect" simple as that.

CnoEvil said:
- A PC has no form of clock, so the DAC ideally needs to be an asynchronous...which may, or may not work out as well as a single Master Clock..

1. A small amount of jitter is inaudiable anyway so it's not really an issue to start with (I've done the listening tests and you'd be suprised by just how much jitter is needed before it becomes audiable).

2. Most modern DACs will reclock the digital audio stream and remove any jitter before converting it to an analogue signal anyway. So even if there is a bit of jitter going into the DAC there still won't be any jitter coming out of it.

3. Some DACs are able to synchronise the computer with their clock when they're connected via a USB cable. This means that there will be no jitter at all to start with.

OK. If this is true, please explain why when I run my Sony laptop off its power supply when I connect it through USB to my DAC, I hear mush superimposed on the music being played. This noise is at the same level regardless of the volume setting on my DAC. If I remove the Sony's PSU, the noise disappears.
 

busb

Well-known member
Jun 14, 2011
84
6
18,545
Visit site
steve_1979 said:
busb said:
...I would not be that surprised if PCs became obsolete in homes long before streamers...

Why do you think that?

I'm not saying PCs will be obsolete before streamers - I'm saying if it did happen, I'd not be surprised. Why wouldn't I be surprised?

1. I know very few people who still use a PC

2. Most people now use a laptop (at home at least).

3. If I go into a shop like John Lewis, the number of PCs for sale is minimal - I'd say that there are more Apple desktops machines for sale than Windows-based machines & vastly more laptops or Macbooks available.

4. A great deal of what was once done on a PC (or laptop for that matter) can now be done from an iPad, tablet or phone.

5. My own experience of using my iPad or iPhone is that they rarely crash, lockup etc but I cannot say the same about Windows-based machines. My main reason for running Windows is for photo editing. My beef regarding running iTunes via Airplay (my chosen method) is not the effect on SQ but the fact that iTunes sometimes refuses to start, usually due to something else hogging resources.

PCs have so much more competition from other devices these days. Although I don't own a streamer & don't plan on owning one, I can understand that many people prefer them. I can understand why many people don't care that they can't send emails from their streamer & I understand why many people like the idea of a streamer precisely because its a single purpose deviice & feel that's a strength, not a weakness. I don't take streamer ownership by anyone personally!
 

TRENDING THREADS

Latest posts