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DVD- Vs -CD player
"andy" wrote in message oups.com... As yet another owner of a Pioneer DV-575A I am curious about what the above modifications will achieve and why? **Output muting, via the use of BJTs has always been a sonic disaster, IME. A relay contributes no distortion, whilst in the O/C mode. The output IC used, whilst adequate, is hardly state of the art. Output ICs in 1983 (ie: First generation) CD players were superior. In Philips derived machines, that usually meant an NE5532/5534 chip. A fine chip, back then and still a fine chip today. There are two, 220 Ohm resistors in series with each O/P IC. These should be shorted (after replacing the ICs with a more suitable device, of course). A 440 Ohm output impedance is pitifully high. Additionally, it would be nice to organise a spilt rail power supply, for the output IC. At present, it is powered by a single rail supply, thus a large electrolytic coupling cap is required. I suggest anyone who is interested, to compare the 575A to a decent, contemporary CD (only) player, such as a Rotel RCD951 and report on any differences. -- Trevor Wilson www.rageaudio.com.au |
DVD- Vs -CD player
"Stewart Pinkerton" wrote in message ... On Wed, 30 Mar 2005 07:44:29 +1000, "Trevor Wilson" wrote: "Stewart Pinkerton" wrote in message . .. On Tue, 29 Mar 2005 18:33:40 +0100, "Keith G" wrote: "tox" wrote in message ... Anyone else found DVD players as good or better than CD players for playing CD's? Yep. Plenty of them, in particular the Pioneer DV-575a is very good and will play damn near *anything* and is only about a hundred spons. (HFN doesn't seem to rate it much for CD though..... ;-) HFN is sadly declined these days. I recently bought a 575A to replace my trusty 515 for movies, and on CD it's sonically indistinguishable from the Meridian 588. That's good enough for me.................. **The Meridian must be crap then. I suggest you perform several, simple actions on your Pie-in-ear. The Meridian is widely regarded as the state of the art in CD replay. **That has been my experience. Your pathetic namecalling is not evidence of a problem with the Pioneer. **Lighten up Lord Pinkerton. I'm just having fun with the name. * Dump the muting transistors. Use nothing, or relays. * Dump the output ICs and use something decent. * Dump the series resistors after the output ICs. Those actions will bring your Pie-in-ear up the level of a Rotel RCD951. How about dumping your idiotic opinions? Indeed, how about actually *listening*, instead of just banging on? **No need. The output stage of the Pie-in-ear is the same as that used in a thousand other cheap DVD players. They all benefit from rudimentary mods. And, to answer your next question, I have done the obligatory blind tests. The results were a very convincing 100%. Not subtle at all. -- Trevor Wilson www.rageaudio.com.au |
DVD- Vs -CD player
"Trevor Wilson" wrote in message ... "andy" wrote in message oups.com... As yet another owner of a Pioneer DV-575A I am curious about what the above modifications will achieve and why? **Output muting, via the use of BJTs has always been a sonic disaster, IME. A relay contributes no distortion, whilst in the O/C mode. The output IC used, whilst adequate, is hardly state of the art. Output ICs in 1983 (ie: First generation) CD players were superior. In Philips derived machines, that usually meant an NE5532/5534 chip. A fine chip, back then and still a fine chip today. There are two, 220 Ohm resistors in series with each O/P IC. These should be shorted (after replacing the ICs with a more suitable device, of course). A 440 Ohm output impedance is pitifully high. Additionally, it would be nice to organise a spilt rail power supply, for the output IC. At present, it is powered by a single rail supply, thus a large electrolytic coupling cap is required. I suggest anyone who is interested, to compare the 575A to a decent, contemporary CD (only) player, such as a Rotel RCD951 and report on any differences. All well and good Trevor, but like Andy says: 'why'...??? Don't see the point of buying a perfectly adequate budget player in the first place and then spending *more* money on it.....??? |
DVD- Vs -CD player
"Keith G" wrote Component Out - I'm not interested in multichannel sound) Except cinema 'surround sound' of course.... |
DVD- Vs -CD player
Keith G wrote:
"Trevor Wilson" wrote in message ... "andy" wrote in message groups.com... As yet another owner of a Pioneer DV-575A I am curious about what the above modifications will achieve and why? **Output muting, via the use of BJTs has always been a sonic disaster, IME. A relay contributes no distortion, whilst in the O/C mode. The output IC used, whilst adequate, is hardly state of the art. Output ICs in 1983 (ie: First generation) CD players were superior. In Philips derived machines, that usually meant an NE5532/5534 chip. A fine chip, back then and still a fine chip today. There are two, 220 Ohm resistors in series with each O/P IC. These should be shorted (after replacing the ICs with a more suitable device, of course). A 440 Ohm output impedance is pitifully high. Additionally, it would be nice to organise a spilt rail power supply, for the output IC. At present, it is powered by a single rail supply, thus a large electrolytic coupling cap is required. I suggest anyone who is interested, to compare the 575A to a decent, contemporary CD (only) player, such as a Rotel RCD951 and report on any differences. All well and good Trevor, but like Andy says: 'why'...??? Don't see the point of buying a perfectly adequate budget player in the first place and then spending *more* money on it.....??? All looks quite bizarre to me ... but ... for anyone interested HFW (Jan 2005, pp.34-7) has some details: change output capacitors to Black Gate - "really helped the Pioneer achieve its true potential"; overblown bass "tamed"; high frequency "astounding"; "life-like ... sound blossomed" etc. - you get the picture. :-) Rob |
DVD- Vs -CD player
Thanks for the information.
I am unable to comment on a comparison between the Pioneer and a current, more expensive CD player. However, I can confirm that the result of a comparison between an old expensive CD player and the Pioneer was that the same as the OPs and several of the other posters: the modern consumer grade CD-DVD player was not inferior. Of course, this does not mean it cannot be improved but I would suggest the improvements are likely to be small. |
DVD- Vs -CD player
Keith G wrote:
All well and good Trevor, but like Andy says: 'why'...??? Don't see the point of buying a perfectly adequate budget player in the first place and then spending *more* money on it.....??? No, I just don't see the sense in that at all, if it makes it perform better then why not spend more money on it? I think even the most sceptical here would agree that cheap electrolytic caps leave a lot to be desired, and replacing them in the output stage with caps that have measurably better performance. Using that logic Keith, do you want to swap the cerafine in your amp for a standard RS cap? I will even offer you a tenner for your trouble swaping it over. I have heard a standard 575 and one with the sort of mods Trevor has mentioned and I would suggest its £40 well spent. -- Nick |
DVD- Vs -CD player
"Trevor Wilson" wrote in message
"Stewart Pinkerton" wrote in message ... HFN is sadly declined these days. All those sighted listening evaluations have ruined their ears. I recently bought a 575A to replace my trusty 515 for movies, and on CD it's sonically indistinguishable from the Meridian 588. That's good enough for me. I have the predecessor 563. As Keith says it will play darn near anything in its native mode. **The Meridian must be crap then. I suggest you perform several, simple actions on your Pie-in-ear. Here comes the knee-jerk tweako-freako violence with a soldering iron: * Dump the muting transistors. Use nothing, or relays. Why? * Dump the output ICs and use something decent. Why? * Dump the series resistors after the output ICs. Why? Those actions will bring your Pie-in-ear up the level of a Rotel RCD951. Where's the reliable evidence that the Rotel sounds better or even any different than a 563, 575 or whatever? |
DVD- Vs -CD player
"Trevor Wilson" wrote in message
"andy" wrote in message oups.com... As yet another owner of a Pioneer DV-575A I am curious about what the above modifications will achieve and why? **Output muting, via the use of BJTs has always been a sonic disaster, IME. Musta never seen it done right. A relay contributes no distortion, As long as the contacts are good. whilst in the O/C mode. In which case there is no signal at all. The output IC used, whilst adequate, is hardly state of the art. Output ICs in 1983 (ie: First generation) CD players were superior. In Philips derived machines, that usually meant an NE5532/5534 chip. A fine chip, back then and still a fine chip today. Right, but just because it aint' a 5532 doesn't mean it sounds bad or contributes any audible flaws at all. There are two, 220 Ohm resistors in series with each O/P IC. These should be shorted (after replacing the ICs with a more suitable device, of course). Why? Aren't building-out resistors good practice? A 440 Ohm output impedance is pitifully high. Isn't 600 ohms the standard source impedance for audio production? Additionally, it would be nice to organise a spilt rail power supply, for the output IC. At present, it is powered by a single rail supply, thus a large electrolytic coupling cap is required. What's wrong with a well-biased electrolytic? I suggest anyone who is interested, to compare the 575A to a decent, contemporary CD (only) player, such as a Rotel RCD951 and report on any differences. I suggest that Trevor quit pontificating and do some bias-controlled listening tests of his own. |
DVD- Vs -CD player
In article , Trevor Wilson
wrote: "andy" wrote in message oups.com... As yet another owner of a Pioneer DV-575A I am curious about what the above modifications will achieve and why? **Output muting, via the use of BJTs has always been a sonic disaster, IME. FWIW The Quad 34 uses BJTs for output muting, but sounds fine to me. Certainly doesn't sound like a 'disaster' to my ears. :-) A relay contributes no distortion, whilst in the O/C mode. The output IC used, whilst adequate, is hardly state of the art. Output ICs in 1983 (ie: First generation) CD players were superior. In Philips derived machines, that usually meant an NE5532/5534 chip. A fine chip, back then and still a fine chip today. There are two, 220 Ohm resistors in series with each O/P IC. These should be shorted (after replacing the ICs with a more suitable device, of course). Personally, I would always use series resistors at the output of a source device or preamp. It allows you to define/limit the range of load conditions the source output stage/IC will experience. Without this you may produce problems in some cases. A 440 Ohm output impedance is pitifully high. Personally, for domestic sources I regard the order of 600 Ohms or less as being fine unless there are special circumstances. Additionally, it would be nice to organise a spilt rail power supply, for the output IC. At present, it is powered by a single rail supply, thus a large electrolytic coupling cap is required. I suggest anyone who is interested, to compare the 575A to a decent, contemporary CD (only) player, such as a Rotel RCD951 and report on any differences. Well I do use a Philips DVDR70 (DVD video recorder/player) as well as a Meridian 200. However in both cases I send their digital output to a Meridian 263 to obtain the sound. :-) Slainte, Jim -- Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm Audio Misc http://www.st-and.demon.co.uk/AudioMisc/index.html Armstrong Audio http://www.st-and.demon.co.uk/Audio/armstrong.html Barbirolli Soc. http://www.st-and.demon.co.uk/JBSoc/JBSoc.html |
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