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USB Audio ADCs
I've now started writing up the results of measurements on three different
devices. FWIW The best of these is a Focusrite 2i2. I'll put results on the web and in a magazine article when done. However I'd still be interested in other alternative devices. Steinberg claim that all their 'UR' series *except* the UR22 are USB audio class compliant. Which is daft from my POV as the UR22 is the only one aimed at stereo. Anyone use any of their UR range and can comment on them? Sadly, many makers totally ignore emails, or give a reply which doesn't answer the questions about class compliance. Guess they don't know ('made in china' syndrome), or don't care (Windows is the only fruit). :-/ Oh, and measurements show the choice of USB hub+psu can indeed affect audio performance to a measureable extent. Jim -- Please use the address on the audiomisc page if you wish to email me. Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm Armstrong Audio http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong/armstrong.html Audio Misc http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/index.html |
USB Audio ADCs
Jim Lesurf (for it is he) wrote:
Oh, and measurements show the choice of USB hub+psu can indeed affect audio performance to a measureable extent. Obviously you want a gold-plated power connector on the hub. -- http://ale.cx/ (AIM:troffasky) ) 15:14:16 up 67 days, 17:53, 9 users, load average: 0.26, 0.35, 0.34 "If being trapped in a tropical swamp with Anthony Worral-Thompson and Christine Hamilton is reality then I say, pass the mind-altering drugs" -- Humphrey Lyttleton |
USB Audio ADCs
On 10/03/2014 15:15, alexd wrote:
Jim Lesurf (for it is he) wrote: Oh, and measurements show the choice of USB hub+psu can indeed affect audio performance to a measureable extent. Obviously you want a gold-plated power connector on the hub. Or a Russ Andrews usb psu with yerrite beads. Yerrite? That's the correct response when he tells you how it works, or what it costs. -- Eiron. |
USB Audio ADCs
In article , Eiron
wrote: On 10/03/2014 15:15, alexd wrote: Jim Lesurf (for it is he) wrote: Oh, and measurements show the choice of USB hub+psu can indeed affect audio performance to a measureable extent. Obviously you want a gold-plated power connector on the hub. Or a Russ Andrews usb psu with yerrite beads. Yerrite? That's the correct response when he tells you how it works, or what it costs. Actually the main effect that made me notice was that one hub + psu caused both a low level 485Hz tone *and* modulated a test sinewave to have 485Hz sidebands. I presume these are AM due to the device's ADC having this ripple on its 5V (sic) output. A change of hub and psu and I found one where this effect vanished. I don't think either hub or psu cost more than a few quid. The effects were low level. I probably wouldn't have noticed them with 16bit samples. But they showed there are some gotya's lurking if you are after high resolution. No gold was harmed in the making of these tests. :-) Jim -- Please use the address on the audiomisc page if you wish to email me. Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm Armstrong Audio http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong/armstrong.html Audio Misc http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/index.html |
USB Audio ADCs
On 10/03/2014 16:49, Jim Lesurf wrote:
In article , Eiron wrote: On 10/03/2014 15:15, alexd wrote: Jim Lesurf (for it is he) wrote: Oh, and measurements show the choice of USB hub+psu can indeed affect audio performance to a measureable extent. Obviously you want a gold-plated power connector on the hub. Or a Russ Andrews usb psu with yerrite beads. Yerrite? That's the correct response when he tells you how it works, or what it costs. Actually the main effect that made me notice was that one hub + psu caused both a low level 485Hz tone *and* modulated a test sinewave to have 485Hz sidebands. I presume these are AM due to the device's ADC having this ripple on its 5V (sic) output. A change of hub and psu and I found one where this effect vanished. I don't think either hub or psu cost more than a few quid. The effects were low level. I probably wouldn't have noticed them with 16bit samples. But they showed there are some gotya's lurking if you are after high resolution. No gold was harmed in the making of these tests. :-) Jim Just to make your blood boil: http://www.theguardian.com/technolog...usic-converter or https://tinyurl.com/q8ju7p9 Incidentally, can you *hear* any difference between all these DACs? -- Cheers, Rob |
USB Audio ADCs
In article , RJH
scribeth thus On 10/03/2014 16:49, Jim Lesurf wrote: In article , Eiron wrote: On 10/03/2014 15:15, alexd wrote: Jim Lesurf (for it is he) wrote: Oh, and measurements show the choice of USB hub+psu can indeed affect audio performance to a measureable extent. Obviously you want a gold-plated power connector on the hub. Or a Russ Andrews usb psu with yerrite beads. Yerrite? That's the correct response when he tells you how it works, or what it costs. Actually the main effect that made me notice was that one hub + psu caused both a low level 485Hz tone *and* modulated a test sinewave to have 485Hz sidebands. I presume these are AM due to the device's ADC having this ripple on its 5V (sic) output. A change of hub and psu and I found one where this effect vanished. I don't think either hub or psu cost more than a few quid. The effects were low level. I probably wouldn't have noticed them with 16bit samples. But they showed there are some gotya's lurking if you are after high resolution. No gold was harmed in the making of these tests. :-) Jim Just to make your blood boil: http://www.theguardian.com/technolog...sb-dac-review- digital-music-converter or https://tinyurl.com/q8ju7p9 Incidentally, can you *hear* any difference between all these DACs? LOL!... And I quote.... But I'm totally in agreement with you in your last line. I could hardly believe the assertions in the article were being published in a reputable newspaper. Did nobody think of running this past someone with even half a clue as to the subject matter before running the piece? -- Tony Sayer |
USB Audio ADCs
In article , RJH
wrote: On 10/03/2014 16:49, Jim Lesurf wrote: In article , Eiron wrote: On 10/03/2014 15:15, alexd wrote: No gold was harmed in the making of these tests. :-) Just to make your blood boil: http://www.theguardian.com/technolog...usic-converter Seems fairly typical for 'subjective' reviews. or https://tinyurl.com/q8ju7p9 Incidentally, can you *hear* any difference between all these DACs? Well, in this thread I've been talking about ADCs rather than DACs. However... FWIW I don't personally write, or take very seriously, a lot of what appears as 'subjective comments' in audio reviews. I can't comment as yet on any relative audible differences between the ADCs I've been testing. So far, I'd only prefer one to the others because it clearly has better behaviour in terms of distortion, noise floor, etc. i.e. ye olde basic injuneering. Have I sometimes heard differences between various DACs, CD players, etc? Yes, I think so. Generally slight to negligable when I do. Do I think that should sway anyone else? No. Not unless I can give a concrete reason. On that I can say things like: I preferred the sound of my first CD player (Marantz using the first Philips chipset) when I added an analogue low pass filter to its output. (Toko 19kHz low pass filters meant for good FM tuners.) I think that may have suppressed some garbage around 20kHz and up. May also have altered the impulse behaviour. I preferred a Meridian 263 DAC to other DACs and players for many years. No idea why, but I guess it simply did a better reconstruct and filter job than others of the period. There are various ways for DACs to seem fine in some ways but have flaws that cause audible problems.[1] However I didn't sort out why I preferred it, but it just sounded more pleasing on source material I liked. [2] I now prefer the Cambridge Audio DACs, particularly the one in the 851C player/DAC. Sounds good, and unlike my old 263 and 563 will play higher rate source material via USB. Also (praise!) has a digital balance control as well as volume one. Why can't everyone do that!? So in practice I'd probably still be happy with the decades-old Meridian 263 and 563 if it hadn't been for USB audio, and 'high rez' files, etc. But I have no idea what I may imagine or what has a real physical basis, and no idea if anyone else using different ears, room, kit, and sources, would agree with me. So I avoid giving flowery poetic descriptions of 'why' one item is 'better' than another. Leave that to people who feel they can do so, but tend to skip over what they write. :-) Jim [1] I've looked at various examples over the years. e.g. the behaviour of DACs when presented with sample series that require intersample peaks above 0dBFS. Which, alas, happens a lot with modern pop CDs. Yet almost no-one ever bothers to test for this. [2] Sometimes the reasons may pass by the standard tests people make. e.g. I noticed in the ADC measurements that one ADC's noise floor rises quite a lot when you apply an input signal. So simply measuring the noise level with no signal doesn't tell you what happens when a signal is applied. I don't *know* why this happens, only that I can measure it. I can *guess* various reasons for it happening. But whatever they are, it makes me feel it is a mark against the ADC. That said, I can of course also say that ye olde analogue mag taps used to exhibit modulation noise, probably at a higher level, and we all survived that OK. :-) -- Please use the address on the audiomisc page if you wish to email me. Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm Armstrong Audio http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong/armstrong.html Audio Misc http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/index.html |
USB Audio ADCs
In article , Jim Lesurf
wrote: That said, I can of course also say that ye olde analogue mag taps used to exhibit modulation noise, Oops! Replace "taps" with "tapes". Jim -- Please use the address on the audiomisc page if you wish to email me. Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm Armstrong Audio http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong/armstrong.html Audio Misc http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/index.html |
USB Audio ADCs
On Tue, 11 Mar 2014 10:52:45 +0000 (GMT), Jim Lesurf
wrote: In article , Jim Lesurf wrote: That said, I can of course also say that ye olde analogue mag taps used to exhibit modulation noise, Oops! Replace "taps" with "tapes". No need, I'd guessed you meant 'tapes' (as I suspect did everyone else). Talking about 'what we survived' regarding tape. I remember reading a remark 30 or 40 years ago that even with studio recordings, the IM distortion products could reach as high as 30% on peaks. It really is amazing what we can tolerate for some types of distortion. -- Regards, J B Good |
USB Audio ADCs
In article ,
Johny B Good wrote: Talking about 'what we survived' regarding tape. I remember reading a remark 30 or 40 years ago that even with studio recordings, the IM distortion products could reach as high as 30% on peaks. It really is amazing what we can tolerate for some types of distortion. Best thing to show up tape at its worst is a belltree. No matter what level you record it at, it never sounds the same as the send. ;-) -- *Bills travel through the mail at twice the speed of cheques * Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
USB Audio ADCs
In article , Huge
wrote: On 2014-03-11, Jim Lesurf wrote: In article , RJH wrote: On 10/03/2014 16:49, Jim Lesurf wrote: In article , Eiron wrote: On 10/03/2014 15:15, alexd wrote: No gold was harmed in the making of these tests. :-) Just to make your blood boil: http://www.theguardian.com/technolog...usic-converter Seems fairly typical for 'subjective' reviews. Is it really any surprise, given that the Guardian is arsewipe? I don't think it would be fair to single out the Grauniad for 'subjective' audio items. You can find the same sort of things in a wide range of magazines and newspapers. Jim -- Please use the address on the audiomisc page if you wish to email me. Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm Armstrong Audio http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong/armstrong.html Audio Misc http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/index.html |
USB Audio ADCs
In article ,
Jim Lesurf wrote: Is it really any surprise, given that the Guardian is arsewipe? I don't think it would be fair to single out the Grauniad for 'subjective' audio items. The Mail readers don't tend to know the meaning of 'fair'. -- *It doesn't take a genius to spot a goat in a flock of sheep * Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
USB Audio ADCs
In article , Dave Plowman (News)
wrote: In article , Jim Lesurf wrote: Is it really any surprise, given that the Guardian is arsewipe? I don't think it would be fair to single out the Grauniad for 'subjective' audio items. The Mail readers don't tend to know the meaning of 'fair'. It has swings, roundabouts, etc. Jim -- Please use the address on the audiomisc page if you wish to email me. Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm Armstrong Audio http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong/armstrong.html Audio Misc http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/index.html |
USB Audio ADCs
On 11/03/2014 22:36, Huge wrote:
On 2014-03-11, Jim Lesurf wrote: In article , RJH wrote: On 10/03/2014 16:49, Jim Lesurf wrote: In article , Eiron wrote: On 10/03/2014 15:15, alexd wrote: No gold was harmed in the making of these tests. :-) Just to make your blood boil: http://www.theguardian.com/technolog...usic-converter Seems fairly typical for 'subjective' reviews. Is it really any surprise, given that the Guardian is arsewipe? I don't think many newspapers give especially good technical reviews. -- Cheers, Rob |
USB Audio ADCs
On 11/03/2014 10:40, Jim Lesurf wrote:
In article , RJH wrote: On 10/03/2014 16:49, Jim Lesurf wrote: In article , Eiron wrote: On 10/03/2014 15:15, alexd wrote: No gold was harmed in the making of these tests. :-) Just to make your blood boil: http://www.theguardian.com/technolog...usic-converter Seems fairly typical for 'subjective' reviews. or https://tinyurl.com/q8ju7p9 Incidentally, can you *hear* any difference between all these DACs? Well, in this thread I've been talking about ADCs rather than DACs. However... Ah, yes! I would only use them mainly as DACs, but take your point. FWIW I don't personally write, or take very seriously, a lot of what appears as 'subjective comments' in audio reviews. I can't comment as yet on any relative audible differences between the ADCs I've been testing. So far, I'd only prefer one to the others because it clearly has better behaviour in terms of distortion, noise floor, etc. i.e. ye olde basic injuneering. Have I sometimes heard differences between various DACs, CD players, etc? Yes, I think so. Generally slight to negligable when I do. Do I think that should sway anyone else? No. Not unless I can give a concrete reason. On that I can say things like: I preferred the sound of my first CD player (Marantz using the first Philips chipset) when I added an analogue low pass filter to its output. (Toko 19kHz low pass filters meant for good FM tuners.) I think that may have suppressed some garbage around 20kHz and up. May also have altered the impulse behaviour. I preferred a Meridian 263 DAC to other DACs and players for many years. No idea why, but I guess it simply did a better reconstruct and filter job than others of the period. There are various ways for DACs to seem fine in some ways but have flaws that cause audible problems.[1] However I didn't sort out why I preferred it, but it just sounded more pleasing on source material I liked. [2] I now prefer the Cambridge Audio DACs, particularly the one in the 851C player/DAC. Sounds good, and unlike my old 263 and 563 will play higher rate source material via USB. Also (praise!) has a digital balance control as well as volume one. Why can't everyone do that!? So in practice I'd probably still be happy with the decades-old Meridian 263 and 563 if it hadn't been for USB audio, and 'high rez' files, etc. But I have no idea what I may imagine or what has a real physical basis, and no idea if anyone else using different ears, room, kit, and sources, would agree with me. So I avoid giving flowery poetic descriptions of 'why' one item is 'better' than another. Leave that to people who feel they can do so, but tend to skip over what they write. :-) Jim [1] I've looked at various examples over the years. e.g. the behaviour of DACs when presented with sample series that require intersample peaks above 0dBFS. Which, alas, happens a lot with modern pop CDs. Yet almost no-one ever bothers to test for this. [2] Sometimes the reasons may pass by the standard tests people make. e.g. I noticed in the ADC measurements that one ADC's noise floor rises quite a lot when you apply an input signal. So simply measuring the noise level with no signal doesn't tell you what happens when a signal is applied. I don't *know* why this happens, only that I can measure it. I can *guess* various reasons for it happening. But whatever they are, it makes me feel it is a mark against the ADC. That said, I can of course also say that ye olde analogue mag taps used to exhibit modulation noise, probably at a higher level, and we all survived that OK. :-) Well, you're at least making an effort to figure out which is technically the most accurate. As to whether that means anything in practice, I'd make the following points: When I used to follow this NG I think maybe 15 years back, the consensus was that any difference in digital-analogue conversion was inaudible. Differences could only be explained in the analogue amplifier stages. These were unlikely except in very cheap or poorly designed kit. Also, differences because of volume anomalies in the A-B testing. FWIW (and I would have to accept that's not a lot!) I've never been that happy with the notion that DAC is a done deal. Simply too many unknown variables, not least those associated with hearing and the perception of sound. The availability of higher bit rate audio files might perhaps suggest there's still work to be done on ADC and DAC. Although I do roughly appreciate the advantages of high resolution ADC as a more robust method of recording music. For myself, I can't reliably differentiate between devices. I have a couple of DACs, and computer-based ADCs. I might think sometimes that one or other is variously bright or smooth, or somehow 3 dimensional. I suspect any difference I might claim to detect could be explained more readily through environmental variables (say temperature) than the conversion process. Having said this, I'd rather use hardware that does as good a measured job as possible. It would just get on my nerves if I knew I was listening to music that wasn't 'translated' to a technically high standard. Even if I couldn't reliably detect the contribution. I would add that's only on my hifi - I'm not prissy at all in the car or via a portable, where I do the bulk of my listening. -- Cheers, Rob |
USB Audio ADCs
In article , RJH
wrote: On 11/03/2014 10:40, Jim Lesurf wrote: In article , RJH wrote: [big snip] When I used to follow this NG I think maybe 15 years back, the consensus was that any difference in digital-analogue conversion was inaudible. Differences could only be explained in the analogue amplifier stages. These were unlikely except in very cheap or poorly designed kit. Also, differences because of volume anomalies in the A-B testing. In general I'm inclined to agree, but I'd say "usually negligable" rather than "inaudible" for the sake of caution. In part because I can measure defects in some cases, and in part because I'm quite happy to accept that there will be situations where someone else can hear a real difference which I didn't hear or notice. So "inaudible" for one person may not ensure it is "inaudible" for everyone else. For me one of the areas of concern is the tendency for DACs (and ADCs) that oversample or use digital filters, etc, to have clipping (overflow) or underflow problems. The most gross type being a failure to handle intersample peaks about 0dBFS when a *lot* of popular music will generate these. Hence it is easy for two DACs to measure 'fine' on standard tests but behave totally differently when you play commercial popular discs. FWIW I'm also very wary of both SACD and HDCD for different reasons. Both have their own areas which can cause problems that standard measurements don't show. [snip] Having said this, I'd rather use hardware that does as good a measured job as possible. It would just get on my nerves if I knew I was listening to music that wasn't 'translated' to a technically high standard. I am similar. I can't be certain that optimum measured performance will guarantee superb sound. But I can suspect that poor measured performance may degrade or colour the sound. Since my main interest is in 'acoustic' material (jazz or 'classical') want the sound to be like the real instruments in the real venue. Not coloured or 'sexed up'. But this is a matter of what the individual user wants. Hence another reason for my avoiding telling others what something 'sound like'. Technical info is useful, but in the end people choose what they like for their reasons, even if they aren't the same as mine. Jim -- Please use the address on the audiomisc page if you wish to email me. Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm Armstrong Audio http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong/armstrong.html Audio Misc http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/index.html |
USB Audio ADCs
On 2014-03-20, Jim Lesurf wrote:
In article , RJH wrote: On 11/03/2014 10:40, Jim Lesurf wrote: In article , RJH wrote: [big snip] When I used to follow this NG I think maybe 15 years back, the consensus was that any difference in digital-analogue conversion was inaudible. Differences could only be explained in the analogue amplifier stages. These were unlikely except in very cheap or poorly designed kit. Also, differences because of volume anomalies in the A-B testing. It depeds on the converter. Some are good, and the result of the D-A/A-D is inaudible, some are pretty terrible. I designed a testing scheme for sound cards a number of years ago, and got a range of results. Often the onboard (motherboard included) sound cards are pretty poor. But some even cheap sound cards can be pretty good. (http://www.theory.physics.ubc.ca/sou...soundcard.html) In general I'm inclined to agree, but I'd say "usually negligable" rather than "inaudible" for the sake of caution. In part because I can measure defects in some cases, and in part because I'm quite happy to accept that there will be situations where someone else can hear a real difference which I didn't hear or notice. So "inaudible" for one person may not ensure it is "inaudible" for everyone else. Unfortunately "others can hear" can be a real swamp. It has been shown that people's hearing is hugely sensitive to expectation, and other psychological effects. People hear differences where there are none. Of course another question is what tests correlate best with difference which are audible. For me one of the areas of concern is the tendency for DACs (and ADCs) that oversample or use digital filters, etc, to have clipping (overflow) or underflow problems. The most gross type being a failure to handle intersample peaks about 0dBFS when a *lot* of popular music will generate these. Hence it is easy for two DACs to measure 'fine' on standard tests but behave totally differently when you play commercial popular discs. FWIW I'm also very wary of both SACD and HDCD for different reasons. Both have their own areas which can cause problems that standard measurements don't show. [snip] Having said this, I'd rather use hardware that does as good a measured job as possible. It would just get on my nerves if I knew I was listening to music that wasn't 'translated' to a technically high standard. I am similar. I can't be certain that optimum measured performance will guarantee superb sound. But I can suspect that poor measured performance may degrade or colour the sound. Since my main interest is in 'acoustic' material (jazz or 'classical') want the sound to be like the real instruments in the real venue. Not coloured or 'sexed up'. But this is a Unfortunately that is impossible, since at the least the rooms are completely different. The resonances in your room and in the jazz venue differ hugely and even in the venue, if you move a foot, the sound is completely different. matter of what the individual user wants. Hence another reason for my avoiding telling others what something 'sound like'. Technical info is useful, but in the end people choose what they like for their reasons, even if they aren't the same as mine. Jim |
USB Audio ADCs
In article , William Unruh
wrote: On 2014-03-20, Jim Lesurf wrote: In article , RJH wrote: In general I'm inclined to agree, but I'd say "usually negligable" rather than "inaudible" for the sake of caution. In part because I can measure defects in some cases, and in part because I'm quite happy to accept that there will be situations where someone else can hear a real difference which I didn't hear or notice. So "inaudible" for one person may not ensure it is "inaudible" for everyone else. Unfortunately "others can hear" can be a real swamp. It has been shown that people's hearing is hugely sensitive to expectation, and other psychological effects. People hear differences where there are none. Of course another question is what tests correlate best with difference which are audible. FWIW I agree. But also accept there will be times when I (or someone else) can't hear something that others can genuinely hear. And some effects can be subtle or not be what someone is 'listening for'. So this isn't an easy thing to decide at times. I am similar. I can't be certain that optimum measured performance will guarantee superb sound. But I can suspect that poor measured performance may degrade or colour the sound. Since my main interest is in 'acoustic' material (jazz or 'classical') want the sound to be like the real instruments in the real venue. Not coloured or 'sexed up'. But this is a Unfortunately that is impossible, since at the least the rooms are completely different. Yet in practice you can set up a system well and your hearing can tend to 'tune out' the effect of the home room simply because you are so habituated to it. Can take a lot of work and good speakers, but does happen. Stereo is an illusion after all. In my case after many weeks of experiment, shifting speaker, furnishings, adding wall rugs, etc, using Quad ESLs I can get a pretty convincing imitation of sitting in a venue like the RFH or RAH or ye olde Maida Vale that I used to know reasonably well. One of the advantages of human perception doing subconscious processing on what we 'hear'. An advantage of the ESL63 and its descendants is the directional behavior. That - with some wall treatment of the far and rear walls - does help a lot. It won't be exactly the same, but can be convincing enough to let you forget the room you are in and hear a decent result. [1] The resonances in your room and in the jazz venue differ hugely and even in the venue, if you move a foot, the sound is completely different. Again agreed. I usually have to adjust my ear locations to about a cm in space to get the required results with good source material. e.g. for Proms via R3. Jim [1] This is why I'd be interested in the BBCs current surround stream tests. The best results I've ever heard was listening to 'quad' in ye olde days at Kingswood Warren. But how close you can get at home is another matter, even having fiddled with the room acoustic, etc. -- Please use the address on the audiomisc page if you wish to email me. Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm Armstrong Audio http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong/armstrong.html Audio Misc http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/index.html |
USB Audio ADCs
Hi,
I've now put up a webpage at http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/HFN/ADC/USBrecording.html showing the results I got from three different external USB ADC/DACs. I did the tests with Linux and RO and got much the same behaviour. Only added variable is some sensitivity to the choice of PSU for the 5Vdc line of the devices. If someone knows of a 192k/24 device I can try that complies with the open USB audio class standards, please let me know. Alas, All the ones I tried to find out about either gave no info or I was told 'not compliant'. Jim -- Please use the address on the audiomisc page if you wish to email me. Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm Armstrong Audio http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong/armstrong.html Audio Misc http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/index.html |
USB Audio ADCs
On 03/26/2014 02:52 PM, Jim Lesurf wrote:
Hi, I've now put up a webpage at http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/HFN/ADC/USBrecording.html showing the results I got from three different external USB ADC/DACs. I did the tests with Linux and RO and got much the same behaviour. Only added variable is some sensitivity to the choice of PSU for the 5Vdc line of the devices. If someone knows of a 192k/24 device I can try that complies with the open USB audio class standards, please let me know. Alas, All the ones I tried to find out about either gave no info or I was told 'not compliant'. Is this the sort of thing you're looking for? http://www.whathifi.com/blog/m2tech-hiface-dac-hands-on-review No driver needed for Mac and Linux, although you might need a fairly recent kernel. -- ╔═╦═╦═════╦═══╗ ║ ║ ║ ║ ║ ╔═╝ ║ ║ ║ ║ ║ ╔═╝ ╚═══╩═╩═╩═╩═╩═╝ -- JimP. |
USB Audio ADCs
In article , Jim Price
wrote: On 03/26/2014 02:52 PM, Jim Lesurf wrote: Hi, I've now put up a webpage at http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/HFN/ADC/USBrecording.html If someone knows of a 192k/24 device I can try that complies with the open USB audio class standards, please let me know. Alas, All the ones I tried to find out about either gave no info or I was told 'not compliant'. Is this the sort of thing you're looking for? http://www.whathifi.com/blog/m2tech-hiface-dac-hands-on-review No driver needed for Mac and Linux, although you might need a fairly recent kernel. Nor is it an *ADC* so far as I can see. I already have a number of DACs that do rates above 96k OK. But that isn't the topic covered in the webpage. Jim -- Please use the address on the audiomisc page if you wish to email me. Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm Armstrong Audio http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong/armstrong.html Audio Misc http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/index.html |
USB Audio ADCs
On Wed, 26 Mar 2014 14:52:54 +0000 (GMT)
Jim Lesurf wrote: Hi, I've now put up a webpage at http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/HFN/ADC/USBrecording.html showing the results I got from three different external USB ADC/DACs. I did the tests with Linux and RO and got much the same behaviour. Only added variable is some sensitivity to the choice of PSU for the 5Vdc line of the devices. If someone knows of a 192k/24 device I can try that complies with the open USB audio class standards, please let me know. Alas, All the ones I tried to find out about either gave no info or I was told 'not compliant'. Jim Komplete audio 6 is class compliant, and working fine here on a debian system. -- W J G |
USB Audio ADCs
In article 20140326190521.1f4d5b9d@debian, Folderol
wrote: On Wed, 26 Mar 2014 14:52:54 +0000 (GMT) Jim Lesurf If someone knows of a 192k/24 device I can try that complies with the open USB audio class standards, please let me know. Alas, All the ones I tried to find out about either gave no info or I was told 'not compliant'. Komplete audio 6 is class compliant, and working fine here on a debian system. That's certainly interesting because of the extra inputs and outputs, inc. spdif! However the webpage and manual say the max sample rate is 96k. I'll contact them, though, as I'd love to test one and see how it performs. Jim -- Please use the address on the audiomisc page if you wish to email me. Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm Armstrong Audio http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong/armstrong.html Audio Misc http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/index.html |
USB Audio ADCs
On Wed, 26 Mar 2014 15:53:09 +0000, Jim Price wrote:
Is this the sort of thing you're looking for? http://www.whathifi.com/blog/m2tech-hiface-dac-hands-on-review No driver needed for Mac and Linux, although you might need a fairly recent kernel. Yes, you do. IIRC it needs to be at least 3.11 for Linux - Richard |
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