+1 ….Bigtime
what you believe is limited to your system , a fine and important distinction.
(1) Toddle down to your local bricks and mortar high-end audio store and personally audition a direct bake-off in a high-end system between a quality build high-end streamer and your PC suggestion ,
(2) Contemporaneously, ask yourself the question why audio presenters at the major audiofests use high-end streamers in their high-end systems in lieu of your suggested PC’,
Here’s an abbreviated summary of what most people experience as the differences that weren’t subtle.
- First, you can witness more clarity across the audioband with the high-end streamer, most noticeably through the midrange and highs.
An example: Cymbals sound cleaner, losing a touch of digital roughness and edge; voices not only popped more noticeably from the mix, but also had more fullness, presence, and detail. The voices sound clearer, were noticeably more defined on the soundstage, with greater weight with a greater sense of presence and liquidity that are riveting to listen to.
- The bass will be a bit tighter and “meatier,” but many may find the improvements in the lower ranges as not quite as big as in the mids and highs. Still, they were apparent. To repeat a phrase that other reviewers have used: There was more there.
- But the sound isn’t just cleaner -- the musical backdrop seemed quieter, too, as if the noise floor had dropped. This results in some other improvements. One was that you can expect to hear deeper into recordings -- subtle details are easier to discern. In a nutshell, resolution was improved.
- soundstage and imaging are markedly improved as well. With better clarity, increased resolution, and “blacker” backgrounds, images hang more starkly in space, the spaces between musicians on the stage are far easier to discern, and the width and depth of the stage were greater (provided the recording contained that information)

