Musical Fidelity Tri-vista 21 DAC


any info or reviews on the Musical Fidelity Tri-vista 21 DAC please? Cant find any reviews. Anyone with personal experience?
manhar
The Trivista 21 is a very good Dac. It has excellent soundstaging, a very even balanced spectrum and reasonably dynamic. Definition is also a strong point. The musical flow is good and the dac is easy to listen to for hours on end. Although I hold this dac in high regard, it is not quite the equal of a dcs Elgar and, considering the cost of the dcs rig (Elgar + Purcell), I don't think one could expect it to be. The dcs also has all the strong points of the Trivista with perhaps a touch better bass response as well as overall definition. In addition, the manner in which musical notes just start, evolve and decay in free space seems to elude the Trivista delivery.

Don't take this as meaning the Trivista is a second class dac though. Actually, at it's going cost I consider it about as good a dac as I have heard. And, while mentioning the cost, be sure to contact Walter "Underwood Hi-Fi" as he has been selling the Trivista 21's at $1490 brand new. I believe Musical Fidelity has discontinued this model and it is being replaced by another or, another series (I am not real clear on this though).
My local dealer sells both Audio Note and MF. He was quite taken with the 21, feeling that it had much of the organic quality prized by the owners of Audio Note DACs. He feels it punches well out of its weight class. I have heard it, but only under store conditions. It sounded very nice, but I can't go further than that.
I bought mine new over a year ago and was delighted with the overall improvement in resolution of low level detail, in in spacious three dimensional imaging. At the time, I was driving Electra 906 speakers with the MF A3.2cr power and A308cr pre. My Arcam FMJ 23 CD served as transport.

When I bought new speakers and a more powerful amp, the synergy was no longer good, even after allowing a healthy warm-in period. The high treble had developed a sort of ultra sonic glare that I found uncomfortable; others didn't seem to notice.

Removing the DAC eliminated that problem in the new system. Taking out the new speakers with their ultra high-rez tweeter , subbing in an old pair of Totem Sttafs, and hooking up the DAC again, also worked well. Taking the Arcam out of the pic, and subbing an old Theta Data Basic transport worked best of all.

That is not particularly a criticism of the Tri Vista, but a warning that system synergy can be crucial. Everybody knows that; I had to learn the hard way.
I think this is an excellent DAC. I auditioned it against some well regarded and somewhat similarly priced units (another DAC and some one-box players, including the Arcam FMJ33). I think MSRP is $2400. Anyway, the Tri-Vista was my favorite of the bunch. Less forward than the Arcam but with good detail, and far better soundstaging and natural flow. I agree that it has an "organic" sort of quality, while still being very clean and not rolled off. I would say that it has a "middle of the concert hall" perspective and is very musical. I agree with the prior poster that the Tri-Vista is really easy to listen to. And hey, even mentioning it in the same breath as the dcs is a pretty strong compliment. I should also say that I was not using a particularly strong transport, so I don't know that I heard it at its best. If you need a DAC I'd definitely check it out.

It is, however, a "discontinued" model because it is one of Musical Fidelity's ongoing series of "limited editions" - in other words, it was never intended to be an ongoing production piece. IMO, this is a rather annoying practice that this manufacturer overindulges in. These guys seem to have an obsessive need to change model lines about every ten minutes. It's a sweet DAC though...