I'm a Roon fan and have had no major technical issues. An occasional reboot keeps things more responsive. I haven't found a better product for discovering new music. I wish there was a comprehensive guide to Roon-I suspect it will do things I haven't discovered. Does such a thing exist?
Roon After 3 Years: The Rolls Royce of Streaming I Didn’t Know I Needed
My Roon journey didn’t begin in some plush listening room with tubes glowing like angelic halos.
No—Roon and I met in Florida, of all places, during a six-month work exile where the only thing hotter than the weather was my frustration with portable hi-fi setups.
Imagine chasing flagship sound on the road: over-ears, IEMs, portable stacks, dongles, DAPs—every combination known to mankind and three that probably bent space-time. My expectations were high.
Apex sound anywhere. Anytime.
But with PC, mobile, and portable limitations, one thing became obvious fast:
Stability is king.
And almost nothing was stable.
Dropouts. App crashes. Devices not recognized. Bluetooth tantrums. Qobuz desktop deciding randomly to just… not output sound.
(We’ve all been there: “Is it the DAC? The cable? The router? The cat?”)
Then I found the one thing that simply worked:
Roon.
I finally understood why Roon even exists when Qobuz mobile and desktop are technically free.
Roon sounded just as good—but it sounded better because it never tripped, froze, crashed, or evaporated into digital dust. It was the Rolls Royce of playback: not necessarily faster or flashier, but always there, always on, always elegant.
It gave me the same feeling as a perfectly damped volume knob.
Just… right.
The Return Home: The Aurender Detour
After the Florida tour of duty, I came home and happily rejoined my Aurender setup. Conductor V4 looked beautiful, felt premium, and had that unmistakable “we make hardware” polish. I thought:
“Okay, Roon, thanks for your service—but I’m going back to Conductor.”
So I unsubscribed.
And I was convinced that was that.
Especially because the top Aurenders still don’t support Roon.
Case closed.
Until…
Stability struck again.
When Apple Music would drop.
When Qobuz desktop would stop sending audio.
When Conductor wouldn’t connect.
When Volumio wandered off into Martian airspace searching for a signal that probably didn’t exist.
Suddenly I remembered the one platform that behaved like a commercial airliner:
Roon — the Rolls Royce both on land AND in the sky.
Stability everywhere.
Consistent performance every time.
Streaming engines that don’t cough, stall, or demand a reboot ritual.
No dramatic EQ resets.
No missing audio zones.
No wondering if your DAC had suddenly chosen to retire early and move to Miami.
Just rock-solid, confident playback.
The Truth After Three Years
Roon doesn't sound better than Qobuz or Volumio.
It doesn't magically sprinkle fairy dust over PCM.
What it does is more important:
It delivers music perfectly, without fail.
And when you're chasing high-end audio—
with systems that cost as much as used airplanes—
stability becomes sound quality.
Roon is the tuned V8 that hums at 6000 RPM all day long without breaking a sweat.
You push it into the red—
it smiles.
It asks for more.
After three years, I can say this confidently:
I could not deeply enjoy hi-fi without Roon.
Not because it’s prettier.
Not because it’s “higher resolution.”
But because it works every time, and in high-end audio, that simple miracle is worth its weight in gold.
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Five stars. Nay, seven.
A new superhighway of sonic nirvana.
-brandonhifi
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- 37 posts total
My core is a SonicTransporter I7 Gen3, I have 2 Lifetime memberships as I was completely hooked when I tried for the first time. Now headache after headache, my I7 has 32g Ram and my NAS has 35K albums and 400k tracks. Props to those of you that have had zero issues me personally can’t say that’s the case. |
@kerrybh - I just asked that question of AI. The answer returned links to a couple of blogs - Moon Audio (link) and Audio Advice (link), as well as Roon's own blog - "How to Roon" series (link). There may be others. I occasionally hear about folks having operational problems with Roon, which I don't have, and I am curious whether Roon is equally reliable regardless of which platform people use for the core, i.e., Windows, macOS, or Linux. |
Roon changed how I listen to music - for the better. Sound quality is excellent. The UI makes discovering new music/artists easy and sometimes surprising. Getting started with Airplay allowed me to try it with old Airplay adapters. I’ve posted about Roon on here before and my opinion hasn’t changed: Roon is great when it’s working. And it will work for long stretches of time. When it stops working, get ready for a techno slog. Their support is crowd sourced and IMO not particularly helpful. I wouldn’t recommend Roon if you don’t have at least rudimentary system and network administration chops. Any questions about your account are answered quickly. |
- 37 posts total

