Question What Format ?

Page 3 - Seeking answers? Join the What HiFi community: the world's leading independent guide to buying and owning hi-fi and home entertainment products.

What is your preferred Format ?

  • 1.

    Votes: 12 48.0%
  • 2.

    Votes: 8 32.0%
  • 3.

    Votes: 4 16.0%
  • 4.

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • 5.

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • 6.

    Votes: 1 4.0%

  • Total voters
    25
Streaming is not really a format, its just a delivery process, which means any format that is or has been converted to digital is the original format not the stream.

Bill

It's also a term misunderstood and/or misused by audiophiles.

Most audiophiles equate streaming as just accessing a commercial service over the internet.

When the literal definition of streaming is the transmission of data over a (computer) network...

That could be from a commercially operated server over the internet or equally your own personal rips/downloads stored locally and accessed over your LAN...
 
It's also a term misunderstood and/or misused by audiophiles.

Most audiophiles equate streaming as just accessing a commercial service over the internet.

When the literal definition of streaming is the transmission of data over a (computer) network...

That could be from a commercially operated server over the internet or equally your own personal rips/downloads stored locally and accessed over your LAN...
That's mostly all streaming is to me - playing my own music, very locally, from a partition of the SD card in one RPi (for a headphone rig)- and an SSD plugged into another RPi (for a system).
 
1. Streaming
2. CD
3. Vinyl
4.Cassette
5.Mini disc
6. Other
My main setup has had 1 through 4 equipment for years. Two internet radios are my 6. Other, unless that would also fit under "Streaming". CDs have been my only continuous source since 1985 and my sine qua non this century. I use all four "formats", but 3 CD players and a ton of CD FLAC and 320-kbps CD rips allow or account for 90-some percent of my listening through my stereo, DAPs, and car setups. My old Audi is equipped with a 6-CD player, a cassette player, and an after-market Bluetooth setup, and this black beast satisfies 90-some percent of my mobile-listening requirement.

If this response has been helpful, please like and subscribe.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Shrek
1. CD
2. Lossless streaming
3. Lossy streaming
4. FM radio
5. DAB+ radio

I don't know why but well recorded CD's sounds better on my technics CD player from 1989 than hi-res tidal streams. Much more organic and musical.
 
Assuming the music masters are the same and they're not going through the same DAC, then it could just be that you prefer the DAC in the Technics.

It's not just that. I had a Technics CD player too and it was superb. My hunch, and I'm happy to be proven wrong, is that common off the shelf DACs like ESS and AKM that are widespread in today's hifi are tuned or designed for hyper clarity at the expense of soundstaging and imaging. I'm willing to bet that the older DACs used in the late 80s and early 90s were just better in those areas.

What I've also noticed about Tidal streams >- CD resolution i.e. High tier and above is that they do really sound good, but the music doesn't 'flow' much. In that regard I understand why the person above says he prefers CD as it still has a level of fluidity that streaming sometimes lacks.

I cannot speak for Qobuz, as I've not heard it yet. Maybe that will surprise me.
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Reactions: Jasonovich and Gray

TRENDING THREADS

Latest posts