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CD-player died, need advice
"Trevor Wilson" wrote
in message "Rob" wrote in message ... Trevor Wilson wrote: "Martin "Schöön"" wrote in message ... Gentlemen, I replaced the driving belt of my trusted old Thorens TD166 this week and today I find the CD-player has become so upset by this it refuses to play or even acknowledge the existence of the CDs I feed it. The CD player is a Cambridge Audio thing (everything important inside is labeled Sony) about five years old (the Thorens is 25 years old). So, even though the Thorens 166 works just fine and I have a number of LPs to play I am in the market for a CD-player. I don't care much for fancy brand names and exotic design but I want good sound reproduction. (and reliability). Any recommendations? Second hand? (New models are not always better) DVD-players? **Forget second hand, unless you are prepared to throw a new laser in a decent exotic machine. IMO, the best value around today is the Harman Kardon HD970. Brilliant machine for not too much cash. It'll even play MP3s. Trevor Wilson It's well over 200UKP. Why does it sound better than a Sony £30 DVD player? **Send me the schematic of your 30 Squid Sony and I'll tell you. The HK has a number of significant technical details which, IMO, make it sound better than all the cheap players (and most of the expensive ones) I've ever heard. I thought that all named CDPs sound identical nowadays?! **I suggest you do some listening. You may well be in for a shock. If you listen with a salesman in attendance, or after reading the usual ignorant hype in one of the high end ragazines, or if you speak with a friend who has spent stupid money on a high end optical disc player, then you may well hear better sound from the more expensive player. That's the major problem with sighted evaluations - you never know why you perceive what you may think you perceive. Doing a decent job of comparing optical disc players is a often lot of work - the big problem is getting and keeping the discs in synch. I've done it, and the results were amazingly small audible differences, some of which were found to be imaginary when the statistical analysis was complete. |
CD-player died, need advice
"Arny Krueger" wrote in message . .. "Trevor Wilson" wrote in message "Rob" wrote in message ... Trevor Wilson wrote: "Martin "Schöön"" wrote in message ... Gentlemen, I replaced the driving belt of my trusted old Thorens TD166 this week and today I find the CD-player has become so upset by this it refuses to play or even acknowledge the existence of the CDs I feed it. The CD player is a Cambridge Audio thing (everything important inside is labeled Sony) about five years old (the Thorens is 25 years old). So, even though the Thorens 166 works just fine and I have a number of LPs to play I am in the market for a CD-player. I don't care much for fancy brand names and exotic design but I want good sound reproduction. (and reliability). Any recommendations? Second hand? (New models are not always better) DVD-players? **Forget second hand, unless you are prepared to throw a new laser in a decent exotic machine. IMO, the best value around today is the Harman Kardon HD970. Brilliant machine for not too much cash. It'll even play MP3s. Trevor Wilson It's well over 200UKP. Why does it sound better than a Sony £30 DVD player? **Send me the schematic of your 30 Squid Sony and I'll tell you. The HK has a number of significant technical details which, IMO, make it sound better than all the cheap players (and most of the expensive ones) I've ever heard. I thought that all named CDPs sound identical nowadays?! **I suggest you do some listening. You may well be in for a shock. If you listen with a salesman in attendance, or after reading the usual ignorant hype in one of the high end ragazines, or if you speak with a friend who has spent stupid money on a high end optical disc player, then you may well hear better sound from the more expensive player. That's the major problem with sighted evaluations - you never know why you perceive what you may think you perceive. Doing a decent job of comparing optical disc players is a often lot of work - the big problem is getting and keeping the discs in synch. I've done it, and the results were amazingly small audible differences, some of which were found to be imaginary when the statistical analysis was complete. **Agreed. And some differences were audible, when used with suitably high quality speakers. In some cases, the differences are not subtle, though these instances are rare. In the case of the HK, I've compared with some obscenely high priced players and some very cheap players. In most instances, the HK has won hands-down. Trevor Wilson |
CD-player died, need advice
Trevor Wilson wrote: "Arny Krueger" wrote Doing a decent job of comparing optical disc players is a often lot of work - the big problem is getting and keeping the discs in synch. I've done it, and the results were amazingly small audible differences, some of which were found to be imaginary when the statistical analysis was complete. **Agreed. And some differences were audible, when used with suitably high quality speakers. In some cases, the differences are not subtle, though these instances are rare. In the case of the HK, I've compared with some obscenely high priced players and some very cheap players. In most instances, the HK has won hands-down. WON by what criteria though ? Graham |
CD-player died, need advice
"Eeyore" wrote in message ... Trevor Wilson wrote: "Arny Krueger" wrote Doing a decent job of comparing optical disc players is a often lot of work - the big problem is getting and keeping the discs in synch. I've done it, and the results were amazingly small audible differences, some of which were found to be imaginary when the statistical analysis was complete. **Agreed. And some differences were audible, when used with suitably high quality speakers. In some cases, the differences are not subtle, though these instances are rare. In the case of the HK, I've compared with some obscenely high priced players and some very cheap players. In most instances, the HK has won hands-down. WON by what criteria though ? **Measurements and sound quality. Is there any other criteria of relevance? Trevor Wilson |
CD-player died, need advice
"Bob Latham" wrote in message ... In article , Arny Krueger wrote: "Trevor Wilson" wrote in message It's well over 200UKP. Why does it sound better than a Sony £30 DVD player? **Send me the schematic of your 30 Squid Sony and I'll tell you. The HK has a number of significant technical details which, IMO, make it sound better than all the cheap players (and most of the expensive ones) I've ever heard. I thought that all named CDPs sound identical nowadays?! **I suggest you do some listening. You may well be in for a shock. If you listen with a salesman in attendance, or after reading the usual ignorant hype in one of the high end ragazines, or if you speak with a friend who has spent stupid money on a high end optical disc player, then you may well hear better sound from the more expensive player. That's the major problem with sighted evaluations - you never know why you perceive what you may think you perceive. All CD players sound the same. Is there any time scale to this? I have not compared CD players since around 1990. At that time most CD players to my ears sounded pretty grim and the Meridian 207 and 208 were the only players I had the opportunity to hear that did the job at all well. If the popular wisdom here is that even then they sounded the same, then I need to find a new group to read. **I, for one, know full well, that all CD players were/are not created equal. Far from it. In those days, the Meridians were, indeed, the best available. Trevor Wilson |
CD-player died, need advice
On Tue, 18 Dec 2007 08:00:40 GMT, Bob Latham
wrote: All CD players sound the same. Is there any time scale to this? I have not compared CD players since around 1990. At that time most CD players to my ears sounded pretty grim and the Meridian 207 and 208 were the only players I had the opportunity to hear that did the job at all well. If the popular wisdom here is that even then they sounded the same, then I need to find a new group to read. Intereting historical footnote. Relevence? |
CD-player died, need advice
In article , Trevor Wilson
wrote: "Bob Latham" wrote in message ... [snip] All CD players sound the same. Is there any time scale to this? I have not compared CD players since around 1990. At that time most CD players to my ears sounded pretty grim and the Meridian 207 and 208 were the only players I had the opportunity to hear that did the job at all well. If the popular wisdom here is that even then they sounded the same, then I need to find a new group to read. **I, for one, know full well, that all CD players were/are not created equal. Far from it. In those days, the Meridians were, indeed, the best available. You can certainly find measurable differences between different players in various cases. The difficulty is assessing to what extent, and in what circumstances, this may have an audible effect, and if this is large enough to matter at all. For me, using a Meridian 263 or 563 DAC was a 'fire and forget' choice. The idea being that I could have some confidence that it would work well. However this does not mean there aren't 'better' (in some way) choices, or cheaper lesser-named ones that would have provided the same results when listening. In general, with the DACs/players I have, and with some specific exceptions[1], I don't think I could tell which one I am using from the sounds produced. Above said, I have more recently found potential reasons that tempt me to move away from the above DACs, but as yet not serious enough to prompt any action on my part as they seem to work find in practice. Slainte, Jim [1] Main exception being with the rare discs, etc, which have some form of fault. -- Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm Audio Misc http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/index.html Armstrong Audio http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong/armstrong.html |
CD-player died, need advice
On Tue, 18 Dec 2007 12:57:11 +0000, Bob Latham wrote:
I'm not in a position to talk about now (though I have an opinion) but if anyone thinks CD players sounded the same in 1990 they didn't listen to many. Good comment, but the key point is do the more recent players sound any *better* than those earlier ones, or just "different"? I've always based my own views on the fact that you pay for every flashing light, switch & gizmo so the chances are that, if you buy a player with those things reduced to a minimum, you stand a better chance of getting a good 'un with better reliability thrown in for good measure! For those who suggest using a DVD player - first you have to find one with at least a track number display or use it with a TV. Very distracting... -- Mick (Working in a M$-free zone!) Web: http://www.nascom.info http://mixpix.batcave.net |
CD-player died, need advice
Trevor Wilson wrote:
"Rob" wrote in message ... Trevor Wilson wrote: "Martin "Schöön"" wrote in message ... Gentlemen, I replaced the driving belt of my trusted old Thorens TD166 this week and today I find the CD-player has become so upset by this it refuses to play or even acknowledge the existence of the CDs I feed it. The CD player is a Cambridge Audio thing (everything important inside is labeled Sony) about five years old (the Thorens is 25 years old). So, even though the Thorens 166 works just fine and I have a number of LPs to play I am in the market for a CD-player. I don't care much for fancy brand names and exotic design but I want good sound reproduction. (and reliability). Any recommendations? Second hand? (New models are not always better) DVD-players? **Forget second hand, unless you are prepared to throw a new laser in a decent exotic machine. IMO, the best value around today is the Harman Kardon HD970. Brilliant machine for not too much cash. It'll even play MP3s. Trevor Wilson It's well over 200UKP. Why does it sound better than a Sony £30 DVD player? **Send me the schematic of your 30 Squid Sony and I'll tell you. The HK has a number of significant technical details which, IMO, make it sound better than all the cheap players (and most of the expensive ones) I've ever heard. Can't help with that I'm afraid. The manual just has a list of specs, rather than components (it's a xd-ax10, badged Aiwa). From what I gather (from this NG): 1. DACs are a 'done deal', and have been for about 10 years - differences such as they are are inaudible; 2. Transports are transports - it's not possible to have an audio signature, they work or they don't; 3. Analogue amplification has to be mightily wrong to create difference, and it's so simple and cheap it has no effect in practice. OTOH, if I believe what I read in the mags, differences are either presented as obvious, or technically valid (an article on jitter, for example, laid claims IIRC). Which leads me to ... I thought that all named CDPs sound identical nowadays?! **I suggest you do some listening. You may well be in for a shock. I have. I *think* I can detect difference, but I've never been able to reliably distinguish between digital sources using the same material, and I certainly can't state whether one's better than t'other. To this end, most of my digital music is on HD/lossless compression, and plays through a Mac Mini. I've given away about 500 CDs, and kept about 200 for some reason, probably sentimental. I use lossless compression because I can hear the effects of mp3 compression - not always objectionable, although I find the sound a little 'thin'. The conclusion I've come to - that if there is a difference it doesn't matter - could be a result of mid-fi speakers (Castle and Dynaudio), room acoustics, my hearing or some psychological factor. Or that CDPs (and indeed digital playback) are sufficiently indistinguishable. FWIW, if I did find the HK sounded better, my guess would be that something was going on in the analogue amplification stage. Rob |
CD-player died, need advice
"Rob" wrote in message ... Trevor Wilson wrote: "Rob" wrote in message ... Trevor Wilson wrote: "Martin "Schöön"" wrote in message ... Gentlemen, I replaced the driving belt of my trusted old Thorens TD166 this week and today I find the CD-player has become so upset by this it refuses to play or even acknowledge the existence of the CDs I feed it. The CD player is a Cambridge Audio thing (everything important inside is labeled Sony) about five years old (the Thorens is 25 years old). So, even though the Thorens 166 works just fine and I have a number of LPs to play I am in the market for a CD-player. I don't care much for fancy brand names and exotic design but I want good sound reproduction. (and reliability). Any recommendations? Second hand? (New models are not always better) DVD-players? **Forget second hand, unless you are prepared to throw a new laser in a decent exotic machine. IMO, the best value around today is the Harman Kardon HD970. Brilliant machine for not too much cash. It'll even play MP3s. Trevor Wilson It's well over 200UKP. Why does it sound better than a Sony £30 DVD player? **Send me the schematic of your 30 Squid Sony and I'll tell you. The HK has a number of significant technical details which, IMO, make it sound better than all the cheap players (and most of the expensive ones) I've ever heard. Can't help with that I'm afraid. The manual just has a list of specs, rather than components (it's a xd-ax10, badged Aiwa). From what I gather (from this NG): **Then, without a schematic, it is impossible for me to highlight what problems the Sony may have (or not). Specs do not tell the whole story. 1. DACs are a 'done deal', and have been for about 10 years - differences such as they are are inaudible; **Not IME. 2. Transports are transports - it's not possible to have an audio signature, they work or they don't; **I'd be inclined to agree with that. 3. Analogue amplification has to be mightily wrong to create difference, and it's so simple and cheap it has no effect in practice. **Wrong. There are a raft of issues with analogue stages in CD players, where mistakes are often made. Here's a few things I've found wrong with cheap players: * Cheap, crappy OP amps used in the critical output stages. I've even found 4558-class OP amps used. These date from the late 1970s and are vastly inferior to the 5532/4 - LM833 OP amps used in the first generation Sony and Philips machines. The cost difference is minor. * High value series resistance in the output of the analogue section. * Poorly implemented muting transistors, which short output to ground. A relay is a much better idea. And costs marginally more. * The use of LM78XX and LM79XX regulators, instead of the vastly superior LM317/LM337 regulators. Again, the cost difference in in the order of a few cents. * Poor quality filters (not so much of a problem nowadays). OTOH, if I believe what I read in the mags, differences are either presented as obvious, or technically valid (an article on jitter, for example, laid claims IIRC). Which leads me to ... I thought that all named CDPs sound identical nowadays?! **I suggest you do some listening. You may well be in for a shock. I have. I *think* I can detect difference, but I've never been able to reliably distinguish between digital sources using the same material, and I certainly can't state whether one's better than t'other. **You've compared the HK to a cheapo Sony? To this end, most of my digital music is on HD/lossless compression, and plays through a Mac Mini. I've given away about 500 CDs, and kept about 200 for some reason, probably sentimental. I use lossless compression because I can hear the effects of mp3 compression - not always objectionable, although I find the sound a little 'thin'. The conclusion I've come to - that if there is a difference it doesn't matter - could be a result of mid-fi speakers (Castle and Dynaudio), room acoustics, my hearing or some psychological factor. Or that CDPs (and indeed digital playback) are sufficiently indistinguishable. FWIW, if I did find the HK sounded better, my guess would be that something was going on in the analogue amplification stage. **That would be a reasonable assumption. HK have clearly put a lot of effort into building a quality analogue section in that machine. Trevor Wilson |
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