Does anyone have a digital system that is as involving as their analogue front end?


I have a good analogue front end. Not stratuspherically good but good enough for this comparison. VPI Prime Signature 21 turntable, Pass Labs XP-25 pono preamp, Pass Labs XP-30 preamp and Hovland Radia amp. It has a lovely, very involving sound. On the right recording, I just drop everythng and am drawn in to listen.

My streamer, on the other hand, is decent but not spectacular. It is better than my CD player, but it is not jaw-dropping like my analogue front-end. My question is this: does anyone have a high-end, tier-one streamer (dCS Bartok Apex, Lumin X2, or something like them) that can rival a good analogue system?

audio-b-dog

Yes I believe a streamer can be as immersive as a vinyl set-up, although the vinyl set-up might sound warmer. My streamer is the Eversolo T8 (transport) connected via USB to my Hegel H390 integrated amp using Audioquest Cinnamon cables with Ethernet direct connection using Cat8 cable. It’s like an excellent CD player on steriods.

@deep_333 

The point I would make is that it really doesn't matter what anyone else hears. What is important in this discussion is what each of us hear. I am familiar with synesthesia, and have done a lot of reading about it. Vladimir Nabokov had synesthsia. Once I found that out, it explained a lot about his writing.

I know my hearing is declining. I have a hearing aid in one ear. Luckily, the other one remains analogue. Whether my hearing is not great or fantastic like those soundmasters you mentioned, when I buy stereo equipment it is to please me. And I certainly don't want to start comparing myself to people who have better hearing, I might start buying stereo equipment whose benefits escape me.

So, you're quite a bit younger than I am, and you're doing a lot of comparing. My basic advice, from my older perspective, is that people should buy what they can afford and what sounds better to them. There is a lot of advice about things most of us never could afford, like tens of thousands of dollars in electrical equipment. I think on forums like this one people should try to help one another but remember that all of us have budgets and our own preferences in terms of how we want our stereo to sound. I would for sure keep a soundmaster out of my listening room because he might tell me about all these expensive things I can't afford and I might become disallusioned with my stereo. I buy equipment to make me feel better, not inferior to someone else.

I will have to wait for my new Meitner MA3 streamer. I played James Taylor's "Gorilla" streaming at 192 kHz, the highest sampling rate I've ever seen. I could hear it working hard to assemble all  the bits into music. I put on the LP and there was no comparison, even though the LP is a bit beat up. It was so much more present and in the room. 

@audphile1 

I am testing the Meitner MA3. It is very much better than the Moon. The first word that comes to mind is resonant. Music resonates coming out of my speaker. I can hear the wood of a piano on a deep note. I can hear the decay of the cymbals. I am using it through my Pass Labs XP-30 preamp, so that's going to juice up the sound quite a bit. I'll live with it for a while and hear many other things.