If you want to get the best of your transport, try this.



http://www.symposiumusa.com/rollerblocks.html 

I had used these three roller blocks under CEC TL0x for 5 years about 15 years ago and now I am using them under Jay's Audio CDT2 Mk2.

There are two different balls. If you can afford, the super ball is recommended for more effect.

With these roller blocks, transport give higher resolution and sharper focus.

I think it's effect is more than good digital cables.

But I recommend combination of roller blocks and good digital cable to get the best of your transport.
128x128shkong78

Showing 3 responses by mzkmxcv

As with the digital cables you mentioned, this is all BS. Any decent CD player/transport will not be effected by vibrations, they have skip protection for a reason, it will sound pristine even during an earthquake.

The fact that it states “enhances... video resolution”, so are they saying using these vibration damping balls somehow upscales video to 8K or increases bitrate? Such stereotypical audiophile marketing.
@jtcf

Buffer with skip protection. Do you have an issue playing a CD on a modern-ish car (many current models don’t have them anymore) while driving? No? Then why would a CD player with minimal vibrations in a home environment be worse?

You can literally drill a hole in a CD and no data will be lost, lots of technology is in place to make sure a CD/DVD/Blu-ray is read correctly.

Oh, and before you suggest, a CD knows if it’s not reading correctly due to vibrations and whatnot (that’s how skip protection is able to work), so no vibration-altered data is present in the buffer.
@jtcf

But it is definitely not able to track accurately and there will be missing information.It’s been demonstrated,measured, and proven time and again.


I would love a link. 
 
Then what do you say to the people that rip their CD’s (most using the ones in their computer) and use checking software to make sure it’s bit-perfect?