Showing posts with label headphone beanie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label headphone beanie. Show all posts

FiiO D3 Digital to Analog Audio Converter - 192kHz/24bit Optical and Coaxial DAC

FiiO D3 Digital to Analog Audio Converter - 192kHz/24bit Optical and Coaxial DAC
Customer Ratings: 4.5 stars
List Price: $49.95
Sale Price: $24.78
Today's Bonus: 50% Off
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  • Converts coaxial or optical digital audio input to analog stereo RCA output
  • Supports all popular sample rates including 32kHz, 44.1kHz, 48kHz, 96kHz and 192kHz, at up to 24-bit resolution
  • Ultra low jitter design with WM8805 digital receiver chip
  • Switch selectable coaxial or optical input.

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If you need a solid DAC for converting an optical digital audio signal to RCA or RCA to optical, this is a nice unit at a good price.

I did some research into DAC chips. This unit contains a very good DAC chip. Having said that, I ran the audio signal from different devices through my Sony HDTV (2010 basic model) via an HDMI cable. The Sony HDTV has a DAC in it too and RCA outs (analog out is increasingly rare on HDTVs). I was able to compare audio quality running the audio through the HDMI via the HDTV DAC to RCA and then to an amp AND from different devices directly with optical (Toslink) to this DAC, and then RCA to the amp. The speakers were Magnepan MMGs. All digital audio signals that had Dolby Digital were reduced to two channel stereo in various device settings or were that way to begin with. (If your device cannot change to two channel, all you hear is noise. Some HDTVs with only optical out might not be able to turn Dolby Digital off.

For Blueray/DVD, Pandora (via Roku XR optical out), iTunes music I bought directly from Amazon as MPEGS, and Netflix, I could not discern any difference from the FiiO D3 DAC compared to audio processed through my Sony HDTV (DAC in it unknown). I think this is in part less to do with the DAC but simply that these devices and recordings are not technically complex enough to push even a basic DAC like this. What you put in is what will come out, in this case. BTW: the Roku DAC is quite good too IMHO. Better than the Sony built in DAC. On the XR, it has RCA out on the back. I use that direct to the amp for all Roku audio.

However, when I played audio CDs (Jane Monheit, Never Never Land) I converted to Apple Lossless in iTunes sent over WiFi to an Apple TV 2 to this DAC to my amp, the audio was better. I could also hear the tape hiss on older digital conversions of classic jazz albums I own on CD (Oscar Peterson, Night Train). I would assume, in this case, hearing hiss is a good thing as it shows you that the DAC is capturing the full recording.

I also owned an MCM 24Bit/96K D/A converter which uses the Burr-Brown DAC. The MCM is supposed to be the best low cost DACs out there. But, frankly, unless you are an audiophile, save your money. This FiiO DAC is fine especially for the PRICE.

All testing was done with direct amplification. No equalization or base/treble modification.

Clarification: It was not ACC it was Apple Lossless I used! My mistake... Hopefully the audiophiles who freaked out will now calm down (except for the CD fanatics).

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Hi. Just received this converter. Glad I found it before buying any other one. It has a superior look and finish compared to other similar products. On paper, 24bit/192KHz operation, snr >90dB at only $30, this is unbeatable specs/price ratio. I don't think there is any better product for that price over there.

I have just checked all my sound sources with it (Media Center PC audio sources, Blu-Ray movies, etc, Cable Box) from a LG LED TV optical out to stereo wireless headphones, and everything runs ok. I know it does not decode Dolby so I had previously configured my digital sources to PCM, stereo or whatever option was available.

LG, as well as other TV manufacturers, for any obscure reason, they seem to have decided not to provide RCA stereo outputs anymore. Furthermore my TV has a minijack for headphones on rear panel that mutes the TV speakers as soon as you plug or leave something plugged into it. They must think they are so 'intelligent' those TV chip designers that they decide for me what do I have to hear and how. So now, many people including myself, is forced to search for a solution if their stupid decisions do not suit our needs, and I ended up looking for audio converters.

The device looks pretty well finished, exactly as you expect from the pictures or even better, very nice. I have not noticed any kind of background noise as other reviewers post for similar products, neither with nor whitout TV sound.

The only thing where you notice the typical 'Made in China' quality perception is by reading its poorly written tiny User Manual, but on the positive side, you can get some laughs with it as well.

It is too early to tell about reliability. Other similar devices seems to die after certain periods of use, as reviewers say. We'll see. I will update this review if I encounter any problem.

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This is an amazing DAC for the price. And for sure will suit 99.9% of the people out there.

However, the 192/24 mode seems broken. Whenever I switch to 192/24 the output becomes static and/or some ticking noise that just makes it hard to listen to.

All other formats play perfectly!

As I read around there are similar cases so be warned that this unit may not work with 192/24 even though they advertised it.

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Like many, i use an airport express to feed my 2 channel system, which uses the same cirrus 4344 chip as the d3. I doubted seriously the possibilty of audible differences between the two, so I took to the web searching for any direct comparison of sound quality between the two, and finding none. Curiosity, however, finally got the better of me and I purchased the D3, its incredibly low price helping to rationalize my actions. After inserting it into my setup, i could tell first track that the AE had met its match, and havent looked back since. To quote my wife "it just sounds better" and I agree, it does.

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The product is a bit better quality than I expected. The case and connections seem well made. It is not a flaw of the product that it doesn't work to connect my 50" LG plasma to my vintage 2-channel analog stereo. This product will convert a 2-channel stereo digital signal to a 2-channel stereo analog signal. My TV has no option to send a 2-channel signal out through the optical. It only sends a multi-channel (left,right,center,surround) signal. This product can't convert that to stereo (left,right only), so it only produces static. If your audio source has the option to send stereo to the optical out, this is the product for you. If your TV/bluray player/etc. can't do that, I recommend the GefenTV Digital Audio Decoder as the most reasonable alternative. It's more expensive, but that is largely because it has the more expensive converter from Dolby.

MOTU UltraLite-MK3 Hybrid FireWire/USB2 Audio Interface

MOTU UltraLite-MK3 Hybrid FireWire/USB2 Audio Interface
Customer Ratings: 4 stars
List Price: $595.00
Sale Price: $549.00
Today's Bonus: 8% Off
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  • Hybrid FireWire/USB2 connectivity - connect to your computer via either bus-powered FireWire or hi-speed USB2.
  • CueMix FXTM - flexible 10 input/14 bus mixer with on-board DSP effects, including reverb with sends/returns, EQ & compression on every input & output.
  • 10 inputs / 14 outputs - no channel sharing in UltraLite-mk3 Hybrid; mic , S/PDIF I/O, headphone out & main outs are handled as separate channels.
  • Classic ReverbTM - provides five different room types, three frequency shelves with adjustable crossover points.
  • Two forms of compression - a standard compressor with conventional threshold/ratio/attack/release/gain controls and the LevelerTM.
  • An accurate model of the legendary LA-2A optical compressor, which provides vintage, musical automatic gain control.

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** UPDATE: 7/19/2013

Having owned this device for 3 years now (wow, time flies!) I can say with a fair amount of certainty that this is a solid product. It has basically been on for 3 years without issue. During my initial setup of the device in 2010, things weren't very smooth (I recall having to install drivers and connect the device in a specific order, or Windows botched the driver install) but I just built a new PC and had no troubles this time around. I downloaded the latest version of the "All In One" driver/software combo from MOTU, installed it, fired up the device and it just worked straight away (via Firewire). I haven't beat on it with my DAW yet (still using Cubase) but some basic tests showed it was working just fine.

If you need a compact, portable device that works with both OSX and Windows 7 (x64) this is probably a good choice!

** ORIGINAL REVIEW (2010) **

Having purchased and used this device for the better part of 6 months, I figured it was a good time to write my review. I tend to get verbose, so I'll try and get right to the point! To give you some context I'm a singer/songwriter/producer/engineer (mostly as a hobby these days) so my "field use" of this device has been diverse; everything from recording vocals and guitars to producing dance music solely using internal VST instruments and plug-ins.

To further expand the context, I'm both an Apple and PC user and am platform agnostic for the most part (yes, people like me exist!) and have used this device on both operating systems/hardware, with heavy usage on the PC side.

PC: Intel E8500 (CPU), Intel DP35DP (Motherboard), 8GB RAM, Win7 Ultimate x64, Cubase 5.5 64-bit

MAC: MacBook Pro (MB986LL/A) 2.8Ghz 15.4-Inch (2009 Model), OS X Snow Leopard, Ableton Live

POSITIVES

---------

In general the device is very well-built; solid casing, sturdy knobs, all while staying very lightweight with a VERY low footprint. It is extremely feature-rich, especially for the size! It will likely fit in any audiophile or basic laptop bag, which makes it a pleasure to keep on my desk when connected to my main system. Prior to this I had a Delta 1010 and needed a small mixer between it and my monitors for control but everything is built right into the device.

Connecting microphones, instruments, and headphones to the device is a snap with so many front-facing inputs. I'm also a huge fan of having an entirely separate headphone output on the front of the device with its own volume control, which makes it easy to quickly jump between my monitors and headphones when mixing. No more clutter or external mixers!

NEGATIVES

---------

While I'm happy with the device in most regards, there are some significant issues. Bad enough that I will state plainly that I do not feel that the cross-platform or USB/Firewire hybrid functionality is ready for primetime, even after several driver updates. I firmly believe this is an Apple-targeted device first, and development/support for PC systems has been secondary. All of the negatives I've experienced so far have been on the PC, detailed below. It is hard to not give this 4 stars because the functionality and form are so great, but in a practical scenario I've had a lot of stability issues.

SETUP: The initial set up was difficult. This was not a plug-and-play device. Driver installation, device connection and system restarts had to be in a specific sequence in order to get the device to be recognized and function in Windows 7 x64. I had to uninstall/reinstall the driver/software a couple of times in order to get it right. Thank heavens for community forums!

FIREWIRE: The move to Firewire has been interesting, to say the least. This is a rat's nest of information unto itself and really a problem with the Windows environment in general, but the short of it is that if you ever decide to use the 3rd party Unibrain SBP2 FireWire 800 drivers (because Microsoft is behind the curve with FireWire support) you may need to rollback the driver to the Windows default, just for the one particular port that the MOTU is connected to or the device will no longer work. I upgraded to this driver when I purchased a DROBO so I could utilize FireWire 800 speeds and had to figure out this workaround. MOTU isn't to blame for this, although I would like to see them support the superior Unibrain drivers for FireWire.

SOFTWARE / DRIVERS: The CueMix software is a bit confusing -and defective! In my adulthood I've become much better about reading manuals, but I'm of the mind that if something is unintuitive to the point of being unusable out of the gate, it should be simplified. Routing is somewhat complicated but what made this part of the process extremely difficult to figure out is that the software, after a random period of time, stops displaying ANY sort of input/output meter data whatsoever so you cannot see which channels are active. This is paramount to getting a visual cue of how hot an input is or what the output level of the device is. The device continues to operate the same, and input/output meters continue to work in DAW apps, but the CueMix software basically dies and the only way to get it to come back is with a system reboot, or a power off/on of the device.

Also, I haven't seen a Blue Screen of Death since the early 2000's but this device has blessed me with at least one per-month. If the device is powered off/on while the driver is loaded (i.e. any time in Windows), or if you change device settings while within a DAW (such as latency level, a very common adjustment) the driver will typically crash and take the whole system with it. Even with the most recent software update, the whole thing just feels slightly unstable. Opening CueMix while in a DAW makes playback begin to stutter and glitch sometimes, and I'm typically left feeling like if I breathe on the device my app or OS will crash. Again, I haven't had this issue with any M-Audio hardware -or any hardware since the early days of Windows XP.

SUPPORT: I contacted support regarding the above issues, fully open to the idea that my system configuration could be at fault, but after contacting them twice through the registered user support forms on the website, I never received any feedback (5 months and waiting). Any time I have a question or issue I have to scour user forums in order to get any information.

In closing, this is a great piece of hardware but if you're looking to run a Windows 7 x64 environment you might want to consider another device. It is entirely possible that my specific hardware configuration is to blame, but being pretty straight-forward I doubt this is the case. I think this device was targeted at MacBook users, with PC support being secondary. The set up on the Mac was MUCH simpler, and no, this is not a case of PC vs Mac; being well-versed in both operating systems I can tell you that most other devices follow a relatively similar setup path, but setting this up on a PC was a bit nightmarish.

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Very clean preamps, logical setup, reasonably user friendly, sounds great and works beautifully with Cubase 5. Also compatible with Vista 64 bit. Great package for serious home recording.

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No technical problems at all with the installation, or drivers. On the Sonar forum site it's been suggested that this interface will work it's best using a TI chipset firewire interface. I have no problems so far. I'm using it now in Sonar 8.5, through firewire (motherboard VIA chipset).

Within Sonar each of the mono inputs (or combined as a stereo input), can be assigned it's own track. That's 8 mono or 4 stereo tracks that can be recorded at once. So no more line in, single stereo input transfers for any previous SB owners. The sound quality can be awesome, but my computer is getting a bit old (XP SP3, Duo 2.4 gig, 2gig Corsair XMS, Infinity MB) and, the ultra high sample rates are probably not very realistic (176400, 192000) for myself, through Sonar with multiple tracks and plugins. But 96000 is achievable, with 40 audio and 13 MIDI tracks, using about 10 VSTs, (total round trip latency of 9.8 milliseconds, using 256 samples).

My previous interface was a Sound Blaster Live, so the available options and technical details can be a little bit daunting. What I have figured out so far, is that it has an assignable return. This takes the place of the "What You Hear" function, on a SB card. The onboard hardware options are easily turned on and off, like the dynamics and EQ sections. So yeah I may not know how to fine tune each and every parameter, most of this can be done internally in a DAW.

The advantage is it's there for when it will matter to learn these functions in detail and take a huge load off my system, using the external enhancements for compression reverb etc. instead of VSTs. Right now it's not a critical issue to myself and I have yet to actually study the manual.

The included CueMix software layout is a little clunky (and what was the reason it can't be maximized to show one more track without scrolling and separate enhancement windows?? ).But not prohibitively so and has been rock solid on my system.

I'm really satisfied with this purchase and it has improved the quality and consistency of my home recordings. For the first time what I hear in the software at 96000 using mixes at about 80 megabytes in size, is what I hear on a final conversion to a 256kbit MP3, total 6.62 megabytes. The capabilities and detail adjustments are available for when I care to learn to use them and in no way obstructive, if I choose not too.

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Before this I had an m-audio omni studio pci card based interface. This annihilates it in every way. Solid drivers, easy installation, amazing sound, simple routing, usable fx... There are a lot of interfaces on the market and prices keep dropping but I believe this to be a sound choice when looking for a high quality, extremely versatile interface with no headaches. Very practical in it's simplest form yet able to handle whatever you can throw at it. I have cuemix and the drivers installed on 2 pcs and 1 mac and no problems on any of them.

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I've been running the MOTU Ultralite on my Mac Pro for nearly a year and must say it does not disappoint: rock stable, amazing fidelity, easy to use and compatible with all the apps I threw at it. After installing the drivers, it was plug 'n play. I haven't used the USB connection but having owned other MOTU products I'm well accustomed to Firewire so why change? Love the fact it runs off the connection and no wall wart is required.

I have the TSR mains connected to my M-Audio BX5 for monitoring/mixing and found the integral DAC to render audio accurately and, I might add, enjoyably. The headphone amp also sounds good, has plenty of volume and it is easy to render pleasing mixes with my Sennheiser HD580 headphones.

I mainly use the Ultralite for live stereo recording of classical guitar solos and ensembles with Bias Peak Pro 7. The Ultralite and Bias Peak work together like they came from the same company and are totally seemless. For multi-tracking projects it also works flawlessly with Logic (& GarageBand of course). Not a fan of AudioDesk (the free multi-track app it ships with it) but it's basically a watered down version of Digital Performer. So if you like Performer, you'll get along well with AudioDesk.

The mic preamps are very clean--no noise reduction plugin needed--and have plenty of gain and headroom for my mics (KM184).

For the record the MOTU drivers and apps have been hardcore solid with my Macs, running fine under Snow Leopard, Lion and Mountain Lion. I haven't suffered a single crash, freeze or strange behavior in the Ultralite or any of my plugins or recording apps. And my sessions and editing go on for 4 or 5 hours at a stretch.

The only "gotcha" is a minor one: the control knobs are rather tiny, black against black and close together but I realize the size is a design choice you make to squeeze everything into a half rack space. I'd rather have portability than a full rack unit with big honkin' knobs. Sliver colored knobs would be easier to see in your typical darkly lit studio.

MOTU is at its core a Mac centric company. I actually bought their first product, Professional Composer in 1986, running it on a tiny beige Mac. I think some of the Windows users have suffered a bit because of MOTU's lack of experience with PCs. I'm guessing it's more difficult to develop PC drivers due to greater hardware variations and flavors of Windows. Whatever, I'm a happy camper and their products have been solid for me. The only PITA is MOTU's copy protection is rather draconian.

Marshall Mini Stack Series MS-2C Guitar Combo Amplifier

Marshall Mini Stack Series MS-2C Guitar Combo Amplifier
Customer Ratings: 4.5 stars
List Price: $60.00
Sale Price: $45.87
Today's Bonus: 24% Off
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  • 1 Watt
  • Volume & tone control
  • Headphone jack
  • 0.34 lbs.

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Had one of these a decade ago until it broke. Just recently picked up a new one and I still love it a great amp to just attach to your belt and walk around with. I would like a little more sustain on the distortion, but hey, it's a pocket amp so I'm not complaining.

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Take note that this is a 1-watt amp so that's not a lot of power. But for starters, this is an amazing little amp. Aside from the Marshall name, it packs a punch when on overdrive. When on clean though, this amp is too quiet! Good thing you have the option to plug earphones in. If you want an easy to bring amp which you can just hang of your belt, get this one! But if you really want to practice and improve your sound, experiment a little...I suggest you get a different amp with a more powerful wattage. Also, my model came in a box that didn't seem too new and the "shall"in the Marshall logo is a bit bent (barely noticeable). Bought from Sam Ash.

StarTech.com MU1MMRCA 1-Feet Stereo Audio Cable - 3.5mm Male to 2x RCA Male

StarTech.com MU1MMRCA 1-Feet Stereo Audio Cable - 3.5mm Male to 2x RCA Male
Customer Ratings: 4 stars
List Price: $8.99
Sale Price: $8.27
Today's Bonus: 8% Off
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No problems at all. I plug and un plug often and they appear to be well constructed. I will purchase more if needed.

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Just a cable so no big deal. Just another cable that I didn't have to build and that was so inexpensive it seemed obvious.

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Ordered and received-later than other products ordered on the same day.

The item is not 12" long-closer to 8" long.

It's too short and too expensive to return vs. refund amount, so I eat the cost of the item and hopefully have a use for it later.

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I actually ended up ordering a 3 foot cable, since this ended up being too short (my mistake)

This cable does the job, but, in my opinion, is too short for any car use. Meaning if you have to pick up your phone to change the song, or have to otherwise interact with you phone, get a longer cable. This one is ONLY good for hooking up the device and leaving it sitting in one spot.

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The actual length of the cable is only eight and a half inches. Even if you measure from the tip of one connector to the very tip of the connector at the other end you only get to eleven and a half inches. Very disappointing.

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Native Instruments Komplete Audio 6

Native Instruments Komplete Audio 6
Customer Ratings: 4 stars
List Price: $249.00
Sale Price: $229.00
Today's Bonus: 8% Off
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  • Low-latency performance for using virtual instruments and effects
  • High-quality pre-amps with individual gain controls
  • Direct monitoring for live, latency-free recording
  • Mono input switch for recording vocals, guitar or other mono sources
  • 48V phantom power for using condenser mics and active DI boxes

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UPDATE: I've used this interface for a few months now, and it's still working extremely well. Just today, I hooked up my guitar to Input 1 going into Guitar Rig and outputting that to Out 1/2. Then I routed Out 1/2 to Ins 3/4 and into Ableton Live, then Ableton Live outputting on Output 3/4 connected to my monitors so basically I routed Guitar Rig into Ableton Live:

Guitar --> In1 --> Guitar Rig --> Out 1/2 --> In 3/4 --> Ableton Live --> Out 3/4 --> Monitors

This way everything is seamlessly integrated and I can process the signal in either Guitar Rig or Ableton Live or both! I'm happy to say I've noticed no latency issues even though the signal is being processed twice, and it's awesome to have so many ins/outs to play with.

The BIG Main Volume knob is nothing short of a necessity for me now. It's so convenient to have the master volume control as the biggest knob in reach, it's intuitive. The lighting on top is really prominent and is the icing on the cake. Again, it's very intuitive and tells you the status of pretty much every input and output at a glance.

The headphone input is very well done. Being able to switch between cue and monitor volumes with the button is extremely handy, although I think the location of the headphone volume knob and the headphone signal switch should have been switched.

Other than that, the only thing and the best thing I can say about it is that when I'm playing through it, it becomes invisible, in that I don't notice an "interface" in between my instrument and the sound. It feels like I'm feeding the audio directly into the monitors. And that's what a good audio interface should do be as less intrusive as possible without compromising audio quality or latency.

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A little background:

After hunting for a few weeks for a good interface, I came up with a list of requirements that I was looking for in an interface a good recording interface that also allows for DJ-ing features like cuing using multiple pairs of outputs (these requirements were constantly changing because I was discovering newer products):

1. Must have 4 balanced outputs (two for my studio monitors and two for my headphones)

2. Must have a dedicated headphone jack with volume control (so I can control the headphone volume directly without having to fiddle around with software)

3. Must have monitor volume control (this was a given in most interfaces)

4. Must have a direct monitor (aka zero-latency monitoring) feature to judge the latency introduced by software

5. Should be able to route at least one pair of outputs (ex: 3/4) to the headphone jack (this was surprisingly hard to find most interfaces had headphone jacks that would just combine all the outputs into one line, therefore allowing no ability to cue from your DAW, since you need a dedicated pair of headphone outputs in the software for cuing this was necessary to me because I wanted to DJ as well as record)

6. There should be no noticeable latency (

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