How good is Blue Sound Node 2 in WiFi vs Ethernet connection vs external CD player?


I'm considering purchasing the Node 2 in order to use Tidal in my external DAC that is much better than the internal DAC.  My objective is to have access to CD quality via Tidal in my external DAC.  However, my question is if I do not use a Ethernet connect but just use WiFi for streaming tidal, will the quality still be as good as my external DAC playing the actual CD's?
salc
I find myself asking the same question regarding the Node, or any streamer for that matter. If you already have a decent DAC that you're satisfied with, why would a Node be better than an Apple TV or Airport Express, or any cheap streamer (Roku, etc).

Surprisingly, there's almost zero information out there that compares, say an Apple Airport Express to Node 2 purely on the basis of streaming capabilities.
I looked at ways to integrate Tidal/Roon into my system for some time after also looking at the Node 2 and others I ended up buying one of these Ausus  VivoPC VM42 (or one of the many versions they have) multiple USB ports an Optical out to go to your DAC (or the USB for that mater if you need DSD) I find its great as a stand alone music server I can plug my external hard drives or NAS into I  can stream from WIFI or a wired connection. I added a wireless keyboard/ track pad combo to act like a remote ( the pc's come with wired keyboard and mouse) and pluged it via the HDMI out to my TV (could use a really small monitor as well). all said it gives me the flexibility of a PC but since I'm using it as a dedicated streamer and NAS it sounds really good and is dead quiet. all told less the $500 Canadian.
As @mahler123 stated .. the devil is in the details. I use the WIFI connection and find the sound quality is superb with Tidal and my own uncompressed FLAC library. Yes, I have a pretty robust internet connection and a good router. Rarely a hiccup. 

@arafiq  .. it's like any other component really (i.e., you can spend $20 or $20,000 on an amp, preamp, DAC, etc.). For me, the Node 2 ticked all of the boxes when I was looking for a streamer. The Aries Mini was a close 2nd. Bluesound's broad focus is to be a whole-house hi-res solution. Their products work great alone and grouped/synced together. I also have a Pulse Flex in my bedroom and will likely purchase another at some point. Would someone else be happy with an ATV or a Chromecast Audio? Absolutely. BTW, I have 2 Apple TV's and the Node 2 is much better to my ears. FWIW, I've used the Node 2 with it's on-board DAC, my Chord Qute EX, and my Schiit Bifrost Multibit.
I purchased the Node 2 not as a stand alone, but as part of the whole house Bluesound system.  Arafiq  asks a good question .  I would point out that Apple is discontinuing Airport Express.  I have a second generation ATV and have tried using it as a digital transport but It sounded muffled in comparison to the Node; perhaps the current ATV  is better sonically.  
  The Node2 DAC is really pretty good,, considering the entire component sells for $500

Been using a Node 2 for streaming HiFi Tidal since March but decided to try a couple of external DACs to see/hear if it was the worth the upgrade. I also wanted to upgrade (or replace) my old CDP at the same time so I figured I'll find a way to upgrade the sound quality of both. Borrowed a friend's Bryston BDP-1 and ordered a Cambridge Audio DACmagic Plus, both with two coax inputs. All else the same, the improvements were noticeable. I expected the BDA-1 to sound a lot better but the DACmagic Plus - oversampling to 24/384kHz, sounded real good so I decided to keep it. Hard to explain but in my system the external DAC added more "weight" to the mid/lower bass for both the Node 2 and my CDP. If my budget allowed I would have seriously considered a BDP-2.