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UD-10 USB Audio Converter
Hi,
I'm thinking about setting up a PC based audio system and looking at a way to get something that provides a listenable sound. I'm intending to rip most of my CDs to FLAC to play on it. (And its 'most' of my CDs because over the years I've ended up buying a few turkeys.) I've got an old Denon amp and I've had a look on eBay and there seem to be loads of fairly decent speakers, Mission, Rogers, B&W etc and at reasonable prices. The missing bit is the sound card. Looking round the web, I've stumbled on the UD-10 USB Audio Converter which sounds interesting. Beyond that its going to mean adding a second, quiet disk, replacing the fan with a quiet one and siting the system unit under the desk to minimise noise. I'd love to hear some opinions from those who know more than me or who have done something similar. There is a bit more info he http://www.tnt-audio.com/sorgenti/tr...io_ud10_e.html http://www.trendsaudio.com/EN/Produc...Audio_desc.htm -- /home/richard/News/signature.text |
UD-10 USB Audio Converter
richard wrote:
Hi, I'm thinking about setting up a PC based audio system and looking at a way to get something that provides a listenable sound. I'm intending to rip most of my CDs to FLAC to play on it. (And its 'most' of my CDs because over the years I've ended up buying a few turkeys.) I've done this recently using a Mac Mini, iTunes and Apple lossless. I've got an old Denon amp and I've had a look on eBay and there seem to be loads of fairly decent speakers, Mission, Rogers, B&W etc and at reasonable prices. The missing bit is the sound card. Looking round the web, I've stumbled on the UD-10 USB Audio Converter which sounds interesting. Can't help you there - I note with amusement that Russ Andrews is charging £180 against the US price of $109. He doubtless breathes on it or somesuch ;-) I use the Mac digital out connected to an AV amp, and a Griffin iMic for recording analogue. Seems to work fine. Beyond that its going to mean adding a second, quiet disk, replacing the fan with a quiet one and siting the system unit under the desk to minimise noise. I had great difficulty doing all of this with a PC. The best discs I've used for quietness are Samsung, unless you can get a Maxtor 6L250M0 fitted to iMacs - virtually silent somehow. I sort of bought my way out of fiddling with PCs by taking the Mac route, and no regrets. Rob |
UD-10 USB Audio Converter
"Rob" wrote in message ... richard wrote: Hi, I'm thinking about setting up a PC based audio system and looking at a way to get something that provides a listenable sound. I'm intending to rip most of my CDs to FLAC to play on it. (And its 'most' of my CDs because over the years I've ended up buying a few turkeys.) I've done this recently using a Mac Mini, iTunes and Apple lossless. I've got an old Denon amp and I've had a look on eBay and there seem to be loads of fairly decent speakers, Mission, Rogers, B&W etc and at reasonable prices. The missing bit is the sound card. Looking round the web, I've stumbled on the UD-10 USB Audio Converter which sounds interesting. Can't help you there - I note with amusement that Russ Andrews is charging £180 against the US price of $109. He doubtless breathes on it or somesuch ;-) Frankly, people daft enough to buy his stuff at the prices he charges deserve to get shafted, IMO.... I use the Mac digital out connected to an AV amp, and a Griffin iMic for recording analogue. Seems to work fine. Beyond that its going to mean adding a second, quiet disk, replacing the fan with a quiet one and siting the system unit under the desk to minimise noise. I had great difficulty doing all of this with a PC. The best discs I've used for quietness are Samsung, unless you can get a Maxtor 6L250M0 fitted to iMacs - virtually silent somehow. I sort of bought my way out of fiddling with PCs by taking the Mac route, and no regrets. No idea about noise &c., but this don't seem a bad price to me: http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/r...SIN=B000GLKK5I |
UD-10 USB Audio Converter
Keith G wrote:
"Rob" wrote in message ... richard wrote: snip Beyond that its going to mean adding a second, quiet disk, replacing the fan with a quiet one and siting the system unit under the desk to minimise noise. I had great difficulty doing all of this with a PC. The best discs I've used for quietness are Samsung, unless you can get a Maxtor 6L250M0 fitted to iMacs - virtually silent somehow. I sort of bought my way out of fiddling with PCs by taking the Mac route, and no regrets. No idea about noise &c., but this don't seem a bad price to me: http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/r...SIN=B000GLKK5I As good as it gets I'd guess - Maplin's has just circulated an email with a 500 gig HD for £99 - 'down from £160'. Trying to find a silent drive is difficult, but these people sell stuff that works IME: http://www.quietpc.com/gb-en-gbp/home |
UD-10 USB Audio Converter
"Keith G" wrote in message ... "Rob" wrote in message ... richard wrote: Hi, I'm thinking about setting up a PC based audio system and looking at a way to get something that provides a listenable sound. I'm intending to rip most of my CDs to FLAC to play on it. (And its 'most' of my CDs because over the years I've ended up buying a few turkeys.) I've done this recently using a Mac Mini, iTunes and Apple lossless. I've got an old Denon amp and I've had a look on eBay and there seem to be loads of fairly decent speakers, Mission, Rogers, B&W etc and at reasonable prices. The missing bit is the sound card. Looking round the web, I've stumbled on the UD-10 USB Audio Converter which sounds interesting. Can't help you there - I note with amusement that Russ Andrews is charging £180 against the US price of $109. He doubtless breathes on it or somesuch ;-) Frankly, people daft enough to buy his stuff at the prices he charges deserve to get shafted, IMO.... No, ignore that - the price of having the catheter fitted is included, apparently.... |
UD-10 USB Audio Converter
"Rob" wrote As good as it gets I'd guess - Maplin's has just circulated an email with a 500 gig HD for £99 - 'down from £160'. You have to watch most places including Amazon, I find - nobody's cheapest all the time... Trying to find a silent drive is difficult, but these people sell stuff that works IME: http://www.quietpc.com/gb-en-gbp/home Tbh, I find a networked laptop plenty quiet enough for my needs and handy to navigate material from the viewing/listening position. |
UD-10 USB Audio Converter
On Sun, 24 Jun 2007 12:01:20 +0100, Keith G wrote:
"Rob" wrote As good as it gets I'd guess - Maplin's has just circulated an email with a 500 gig HD for £99 - 'down from £160'. You have to watch most places including Amazon, I find - nobody's cheapest all the time... Trying to find a silent drive is difficult, but these people sell stuff that works IME: http://www.quietpc.com/gb-en-gbp/home Tbh, I find a networked laptop plenty quiet enough for my needs and handy to navigate material from the viewing/listening position. Thanks for the comments. I've been doing a bit more research, reading some audio sites, looking through a load of the old posts on here and searching eBay. The quietPC site is interesting but I'm not going to spend that amount of money on an old PC, at least not until I'm sure this is going to be worth doing. Their total price to get a new case, power supply and all the rest is £315. It seems like a good soundcard is another option. The M-Audio Audiophile 2496 seems to be well regarded and these seem to go for about £30 on eBay. This seems a better option than using the built in sound. The current plan is, 0. Softwa (Already working.) This is going to have to be Linux as the BIOS in the PC I'm going to use doesn't recognise large disks and doesn't seem to have an upgrade path. As Linux doesn't rely on the BIOS for disk info, its going to work fine when I upgrade the disk and I quite like Amarok as a player anyway. 1. Speakers: Plenty of good ones on eBay, time to wait for a bargain. With luck, I can find something suitable for under £100 that I can reuse if I abandon this project. 2. Soundcard: Again, wait and watch on eBay.Say £35. If its progressing well, I'll do 3, 4 and 5, otherwise I'll probably abandon the project before it becomes a money pit. The simple test is going to be to plug a CD player into the amp and see how it sounds. If the PC based system sounds anywhere near as good, I'll know I'm not wasting my time. Then I can start to look at any other obvious factors like moving the speakers and furniture in the room. 3. DAC: A choice of the UD-10 or a second hand DAC from eBay. I can get the UD-10, including postage for £75 though I have no idea if there would be any duty to pay on it. So what I'm going to do is hold off on this for now, set up the rest and if I'm not happy with the results, I'll try either the UD-10 or a DAC. 4. New disk drive: Should be easy enough to find something of 250Gb or over. I'll need a load of new Cds to fill a 500Gb drive. Say £60 though the prices keep dropping. 5. Fan and silencing the PC: Shouldn't cost too much, I just need to get it below the background noise level so allow £30 for a heatsink and CPU fan. I'm off to eBay to do a spot of monitoring but I'll be lurking around here as well. Thanks, Richard -- /home/richard/News/signature.text |
UD-10 USB Audio Converter
"richard" wrote in message ... On Sun, 24 Jun 2007 12:01:20 +0100, Keith G wrote: "Rob" wrote As good as it gets I'd guess - Maplin's has just circulated an email with a 500 gig HD for £99 - 'down from £160'. You have to watch most places including Amazon, I find - nobody's cheapest all the time... Trying to find a silent drive is difficult, but these people sell stuff that works IME: http://www.quietpc.com/gb-en-gbp/home Tbh, I find a networked laptop plenty quiet enough for my needs and handy to navigate material from the viewing/listening position. Thanks for the comments. I've been doing a bit more research, reading some audio sites, looking through a load of the old posts on here and searching eBay. The quietPC site is interesting but I'm not going to spend that amount of money on an old PC, at least not until I'm sure this is going to be worth doing. Their total price to get a new case, power supply and all the rest is £315. It seems like a good soundcard is another option. The M-Audio Audiophile 2496 seems to be well regarded and these seem to go for about £30 on eBay. This seems a better option than using the built in sound. The current plan is, 0. Softwa (Already working.) This is going to have to be Linux as the BIOS in the PC I'm going to use doesn't recognise large disks and doesn't seem to have an upgrade path. As Linux doesn't rely on the BIOS for disk info, its going to work fine when I upgrade the disk and I quite like Amarok as a player anyway. 1. Speakers: Plenty of good ones on eBay, time to wait for a bargain. With luck, I can find something suitable for under £100 that I can reuse if I abandon this project. 2. Soundcard: Again, wait and watch on eBay.Say £35. If its progressing well, I'll do 3, 4 and 5, otherwise I'll probably abandon the project before it becomes a money pit. The simple test is going to be to plug a CD player into the amp and see how it sounds. If the PC based system sounds anywhere near as good, I'll know I'm not wasting my time. Then I can start to look at any other obvious factors like moving the speakers and furniture in the room. 3. DAC: A choice of the UD-10 or a second hand DAC from eBay. I can get the UD-10, including postage for £75 though I have no idea if there would be any duty to pay on it. So what I'm going to do is hold off on this for now, set up the rest and if I'm not happy with the results, I'll try either the UD-10 or a DAC. 4. New disk drive: Should be easy enough to find something of 250Gb or over. I'll need a load of new Cds to fill a 500Gb drive. Say £60 though the prices keep dropping. 5. Fan and silencing the PC: Shouldn't cost too much, I just need to get it below the background noise level so allow £30 for a heatsink and CPU fan. I'm off to eBay to do a spot of monitoring but I'll be lurking around here as well. Thanks, Richard -- /home/richard/News/signature.text I would budget for a RAID 5 disc array at some stage. If you don't then one day, your single 500G drive *will* fail, and you'll lose your entire music library. I know that if you have the CDs, you can reinstall everything, but ripping 500-1000 CDs isn't a trivial task, and in my view, a RAID 5 array is good value if it avoids that. S. -- http://audiopages.googlepages.com |
UD-10 USB Audio Converter
On Sun, 24 Jun 2007 19:53:50 +0100, Serge Auckland wrote:
---- snip ---- I would budget for a RAID 5 disc array at some stage. If you don't then one day, your single 500G drive *will* fail, and you'll lose your entire music library. I know that if you have the CDs, you can reinstall everything, but ripping 500-1000 CDs isn't a trivial task, and in my view, a RAID 5 array is good value if it avoids that. S. Thanks for the suggestion Serge. On my main PC I have a USB drive that contains copies of important stuff and I'll probably do the same with the music. (For the first 120GB...then the USB disk will be full.) Although it means managing the backups manually it also provides easy movement between machines and I can leave it switched off and unplugged. The idea is that it would survive the proverbial lightning strike but that's probably an illusion as I tend to leave it sitting on top of the system case. The greatest risk is probably theft but so far I haven't worried about that enough to do anything about it. Now you have started me down this route, I really wonder what would get nicked first....... Richard -- /home/richard/News/signature.text |
UD-10 USB Audio Converter
"richard" wrote in message ... On Sun, 24 Jun 2007 19:53:50 +0100, Serge Auckland wrote: ---- snip ---- I would budget for a RAID 5 disc array at some stage. If you don't then one day, your single 500G drive *will* fail, and you'll lose your entire music library. I know that if you have the CDs, you can reinstall everything, but ripping 500-1000 CDs isn't a trivial task, and in my view, a RAID 5 array is good value if it avoids that. S. Thanks for the suggestion Serge. On my main PC I have a USB drive that contains copies of important stuff and I'll probably do the same with the music. (For the first 120GB...then the USB disk will be full.) Although it means managing the backups manually it also provides easy movement between machines and I can leave it switched off and unplugged. The idea is that it would survive the proverbial lightning strike but that's probably an illusion as I tend to leave it sitting on top of the system case. The greatest risk is probably theft but so far I haven't worried about that enough to do anything about it. Now you have started me down this route, I really wonder what would get nicked first....... Richard I have been doing this for quite a while. I use a cheap HP laptop hard wired to my home network so I can control all content from my sitting position in my listening room. My main computer has 2.65TB of storage and now the new 1TB drives are here and are quite cheap it will solve all our problems. I run cheap USB external HDs to back up all my music/videos so it can't get lost. I use a E-MU Cardbus http://tinyurl.com/grn2j proffessional sound card and this has a break-out box that sits amongst all my hi-fi gear. You can conect it straight to an amp via analog or digital but I use it to feed a high end DAC/pre-amp http://tinyurl.com/3d7zkd I settled on Nero Show Time as the software as it will allow play back of 192/24 files that I have ripped from DVD-Audio. You can also make endless favourite play lists very simply. I found using the wiresless conection gave me drop outs in high bitrate applications when someone else was on the network or Windoze/virus scanner wanted to an update etc. So I can surf the net, download music etc, talk to you guys and play any digitised music I have without moving my fat arse ;-) Cheers TT |
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