Redbook Keeps Surprising


I was a Best Buy to get a memory card reader for my computer. Looked at the CDs and saw a few in the bargain bin that I would like to have, only a few dollars. Came home, ripped them with DB power amp, picked the best cover art. Transferred to my Aurender through the NAS and played away. WOW, impressive sound and I really enjoyed them both. I like the High Res downloads and my SACD collection but am often really impressed by good Redbook CD. It really is the music that counts. 
davt
Cleeds ...

No offense taken at all. :-)

I just wanted to make the point of how good cassettes can sound in the car environment. I also have transferred all of my best sales training cassettes over to CD's. 
Just wanted to add my take on Redbook ...PCM based players, specifically Burr Brown DAC 's have always sounded better to my ears.  My Krell Cipher sounds spectacular on RB!
This has been a very interesting thread.  

I have a question though. If some of you are ripping red book CD's to a hard drive, then donating or selling the original CD's, aren't you worried that your hard drive will crash at some future date and all of your music will be lost and your hard work will be for naught? 

OP
oregonpapa, backups are for that. I have two backups - second one just in case of something bad happening while copying. This second backup resides at my workplace (fire, theft etc). It doesn’t make any difference to me whether I have original CD or not - I just don’t want to rip huge number of of CDs again.
Redbook ripped to WAV, FLAC or AIFF sounds amazing on my system!  It makes up a lot of my listening and plays a big part in my review that just went live this morning:

http://ayllonmedia.com/news/the-lampizator-dsd-komputer-an-audio-expo-in-your-living-room-or-not
Another weekend, another revelation.

I have a rear panel usb A-port on my dac for a thumbdrive transport. Over the weekend, I compared thumbdrive in series with the AQ jitterbug ported to the rear vs thumbdrive ported to the PC which relays the usb signal to the B-port of my dac via the iFi USB 3.0. The USB 3.0 isolates usb power from the noise and regenerates the usb signal. 

Well, the result is a jaw-dropping experience with night and day difference between the direct thumbdrive-AQ Jitterbug-dac approach and the previous PC-USB 3.0 - dac set-up. More clarity, dynamics, open soundstage, airy highs, fleshed out instruments, musical.....!

That said, I return to the title of this thread by exclaiming that Redbook is absolutely stunning with this direct thumbdrive-AQ JB-dac configuration. When I listen to Redbook now, I am truly amazed at how far dac's have come to make it so, so wonderful. At no point at all when listening to Redbook ripped to FLAC, do I feel that I am missing hires pcm/dsd. 

There is no need today to fidget over new formats or pay more for hires pcm/dsd/MQA when Redbook can sound so gorgeous! We can all just sit back and enjoy our vast CD/Redbook collection with the technology of today's dac's.

A truly breathtaking revelation! 

J. :)
So jon2020, are you saying you plugged the JB into the back of your DAC and then the thumb drive into the JB and that was the superior sound?

What do you use to rip your CD's if you don't mind me asking. I have a huge collection of cd's with new ones arriving weekly and I'm considering getting busy ripping this winter.
Hi donjr,

Yes, that is correct. The thumbdrive is ported to the JB which in turn is ported to the dac. Makes a whole lot of difference! I thought the iFi USB 3.0 was good for the PC set-up but apparently not good enough.

I use JRiver to rip but others have recommended dbPoweramp. I have not compared the two directly but either way, you will be so glad you did once all the ripping is done.

Sounds like a great winter ahead for you. Enjoy!

J. :)

Should I expect much better sound quality if I connect my midfi CDP to a good quality DAC, similar to the method described above - instead of the thumb drive? I have Bluesound Node2 but not sure it takes input from a CDP. They both have optical input/output that I could try.....
Hi kalali,

Probably not as the quality of the cdp’s transport matters here. But once cd’s are ripped losslessly to the format of your choice onto a thumbdrive, all that is needed is a quality dac that sports a usb A-port.

A few other dac’s today that have usb A-ports come from Ayre, T+A, Naim, Cambridge Audio, Lumin, Aurender, Pioneer, Teac, etc. So there is a wide range of choices.

Paying a lot for a quality mechanical cd spinner today may not be money well spent. Saving transport resources for the best dac that one can afford seems to be the better way to go when music files can be easily played from a cheap thumbdrive transport.

The Bluesound Node 2 does not take input from a cdp but it does have a usb A-port for a thumbdrive.

http://www.bluesound.com/en-eu/products/node-2/?cl
As a "CD" collector, SACD as well, these discs have never disappointed.
I began my journey way back in 1987!

3000 discs strong and a-counting....