I could not hear a difference between Analog and digital...... what gives ?


I always thought I could hear the difference between Analog and Digital.  I have been looking to add another DAC to my 11 year old McIntosh D150 DAC, and a recent post here about Jethro Tull inspired me to pull out the two best versions of the Jethro Tull Aqualung album - the Mid 90's DCC Vinyl version and the Mid 90's DCC Gold CD.  These were special Vinyl and CD from the same original master tape and mastering.  Ian Anderson kept the master tape hidden for over a few decades before providing them for these DCC versions.  Volume level is also almost exactly the same between the Vinyl and CD.  I played both versions at the same time through the same pre-amp, amps, speakers - switching back and forth through out the whole album and I could not hear a difference between the analog or digital.  They both sounded fantastic and exactly the same.   What does this mean ?  is this normal ? Has my hearing deteriorated ? Is it because both my Analog and Digital front ends are all McIntosh ?  Is it because the DCC version of this Album could be from a digital file on both the vinyl & CD ?   This whole episode has put a damper on my new DAC aquisition...  I mean if I cannot tell the difference between Analog and Digital, then, who am I kidding with R2R, Delta Sigma, etc....  My system is posted under my signature, and as you will see I have very resolving speakers, so, I am not sure what to think...   I would appreciate any feedback on this surprising experience.   Thanks so much.. 

hjdca

@willy-t - Indeed; I've been wearing various brands of hearing aids for over 20 years (I'm 74 now), and they make a HUGE difference to me when listening to music, television, conversations, and much else. I get new ones every 4 years or so.

Widex are made by WS Audiology, who also make Signia, Rexton (they sell these at Costco for about $1500/pair), and TruHearing. There are only a small number of companies that actually make hearing aids, and they're sold under different brand names. 

Congratulations! If you like the way your system sounds, there’s nothing more to do. Your vinyl and digital legs sound the same. 

Admittedly, it’s a sample size of one so you could spend time troubleshooting this further or you can just enjoy the music. Some of the responses here seem to suggest you should buy your way out of a problem that may not exist.

I read Michael Fremers review of the Widex moment and tried 2 other brands and Widex had the most natural sound and that’s what they are known for.  If you haven’t tried them I would give them a go next time you replace yours 

 

@bigtwin 

Exactly what I was going to post but you say it better than I.

At a certain level of resolving quality in your system the recording quality makes a huge difference.

I would appreciate input on what advances in DACs over the past years that would make them sound better.

R2R DACs do not always sound better.  Are you talking about discrete R2R?  Design implementation is what makes a product sound good.

Happy Listening