Hypex UcD AS2.100

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Indeed..., a new product... :angel: We have been working on this for the last 8 months, and we are very happy we can release it now.

Later this week it will be availble for ordering.

Prices will be as follows;
AS2.100 analog only - EUR 250,00
AS2.100 digital input - EUR 300,00

All prices are ex. 19% VAT.

With digital input you will have an USB Audio and SPDIF input.

Regards,

Jan-Peter
 
This product was already shown on the Frankfurter Messe ( Prolight & sound2009), it wondered me that this revolutionary product wasn't mentioned already on this board. I had the product in my hands a couple of weeks ago and it will be a hit!!!!!!!!

Gerhard
 
I have spdif->wolfsonWM8741(balanced)->ucd180HG (balanced)->2way crossover (1st order to ribbon, 2nd order to midwoof).

Which way is a "significant" upgrade? (analog in or digital in)

I can't hear a lot of stuff that people talk about like cables, capacitors, jitter, opamps, etc.

I can hear switch from chipamp to UCD

What I really want is spdif->Hypex Digital Crossover->2x Wolfson8741(balanced out)->4X UCD180hg(balanced in)->drivers
 
glt said:
I have spdif->wolfsonWM8741(balanced)->ucd180HG (balanced)->2way crossover (1st order to ribbon, 2nd order to midwoof).

Which way is a "significant" upgrade? (analog in or digital in)

I can't hear a lot of stuff that people talk about like cables, capacitors, jitter, opamps, etc.

I can hear switch from chipamp to UCD

What I really want is spdif->Hypex Digital Crossover->2x Wolfson8741(balanced out)->4X UCD180hg(balanced in)->drivers

Ok....., everythign is possible. But this product is target for buidling small active loudspeakers.

Regards,

Jan-Peter
 
Jan-Peter said:


Ok....., everythign is possible. But this product is target for buidling small active loudspeakers.

Regards,

Jan-Peter

Most of DIYers are quite happy using affordable few rated amps... like ChipAmps.
For a 2 way active Xover system, 2 AS2.100 units are required.
Am I right ?

I agree with GLT on the way to go, IMHO : Analog/SPDIF/USB -> Balanced DAC -> Software controled Xover -> UCD Amps
 
We've got many questions about our filter design philosophy, hereby an explanation;
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DSP & liniear phase:
The initial software and firmware only support minimum phase crossovers and delay. A later update (the unit is user-updatable) will include an option to linearise the sum using an FIR inverse allpass filter before the crossover. If this technique is employed alongside LR2/LR4 filters the individual driver responses will become linear phase as well.

The first aim of a digital crossover is to afford detailed response correction. In an analogue crossover you can't have thirteen biquads to EQ a driver unless you're happy to run a signal through that many components and unless you can afford the parts cost and board space. The second aim of a digital crossover is to take advantage of the fact that sources are digital these days. An analogue crossover requires the signal to be converted to analogue first and then processed in the analogue domain. With a digital crossover, the signal goes from the DAC straight into the amp with no further processing. The third aim of a digital crossover is to have a universal product that people can actually use in a variety of projects. You can't tweak or configure an analogue crossover by software. An additional advantage is the availability of delays.

By no means all digital crossovers are linear phase. Commercially available ones that are, are not particularly good because they are brute-force FIR corrections which have all sorts of pre-echo problems. Please have a look at the presentation at http://www.hypex.nl/docs/Bruno Masterclass/slides.htm . There is a section about loudspeaker correction starting from slide 101. I hope you will understand why we prefer to use IIR filters for the actual crossover and EQ, with optionally a FIR filter only correcting the sum phase. This works as follows. After delay correction, loudspeaker drivers are nearly perfectly minimum-phase. This means that you can use minimum phase EQ to fit the response to another minimum-phase target. No FIR is necessary for that. If you do this to EQ the woofer to a LR4 lowpass function and the tweeter to a LR4 highpass function, the phase response of the two drivers becomes highly regular. The sum will be a second order allpass filter with a Q of 0.7 at fc. So what separates a correctly designed crossover with LR4 acoustical slopes from a linear phase system is an inverse second order allpass, which can be approximated using a short FIR filter. As I mentioned in the previous reply, the individual driver responses become linear phase too, as you will appreciate from the pole/zero locations. Listening tests show that correcting the phase response of an LR4 system is only audible to some trained listeners and barely so. It is by no means spectacular.

This shows that linear phase is by no means the core of digital crossovers, and that it would be irrational for us to defer offering a product to the market only because the software does not yet include an easy way to insert the FIR section, especially when the FIR add-on is under development and user-updatable.

Now, the biggest advantage of the IIR xo/eq and FIR phase correction method is that the resulting response is completely free from pre-echos. Several companies sell boxes of the "shove a mic in front of the speaker and compute inverse FIR filter" type, and market these with snazzy looking impulse response plots which, crucially, were measured with the microphone in the exact same spot. Dare to move it by an inch and the response falls apart in both directions. Brute-force corrected speakers do not sound good, although they can be made to look very nice on paper.

From what we have seen published I gather that the sales literature of some of these companies tries to convinced that linear phase is the thing with digital. I hope that I've been able to explain that we *really* know about how to do digital crossovers.

Bruno, Chief R&D Hypex
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Jan-Peter
 
Hi Jan Peter,

Firstly let me thank you for your support to the DIY community. I can't think of many companies who have not turned their back on the little guy while they go chasing the big money. Its good to have you around.

I've been looking for a solution to actively drive a subwoofer pair, whilst leaving the main path completely untouched. The lack of a properly tweakable crossover has put me off for some time, and this looks like it fits my requirement completely.

Can you give me an idea of the latency (delay) through the module?

Having downloaded the filter software and played around, it would be great to have a channel copy function (unless I've missed it would that be covered in stereo mode?) so you can copy the transfer function from one channel to another. Apart from that, great stuff!
 
fb said:
Jan-Peter,

Any chance of a stand alone DSP module?

I'm looking for stereo 3 way, without the plate amp attached :)

Later this year we will come with an high end stereo in maximum 6 channels out. Some technical details;

- 2 channel in, and 6 channel out.
- Input analog, digital AES/SPDIF, USB audio input.
- Control by USB and PC software.
- Resolution, 24 bits / max 192 kHz sampling.
- A/D converters AKM, AK5385A. D/A converters AKM, AK4395.
- DSP TI , optional adding a second one to increase processing power.
- Power supply only 2x12V, all regulators low voltage on board, optional use of our HxR audiophile regulators.
- Special clock design with extremely low jitter.
- Use of sample rate converter.
- Special gain section to adjust at several different sensitive. Guaranteed highest SNR level.
- Optimized for low EMI.
- Size only 105x105mm.
- Optional IR remote control.
- Optional graphical display.
- Optional input relays section to use it as a preamp.
- Digital volume control, we will write our own firmware, target is to have performance the same as with an analog volume control. Will definitely sound much better as the PGA volume control chips!

This will be a true high end audiophile solution.

Jan-Peter
 
simon dart said:
Hi Jan Peter,

Can you give me an idea of the latency (delay) through the module?


The latency will be 1ms.

Having downloaded the filter software and played around, it would be great to have a channel copy function (unless I've missed it would that be covered in stereo mode?) so you can copy the transfer function from one channel to another. Apart from that, great stuff!

Good idea, we will put this on our to do list.

Regards,

Jan-Peter
 
JP,

I'm running XP pro, it is not a big problem if you know it exists. It would be frustrating if you made a lot of effort creating a filter design and you minimize the window to read an incoming email and then discover all your work is in the dustbin because you can't save it before closing the software.

Regards,

Gerhard
 
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