can DACs sound different if they both measure well?

can DACs sound different of they both measure well?

  • Yes, I know I can hear the difference

    Votes: 69 45.7%
  • I think I can hear differences sometimes

    Votes: 26 17.2%
  • Not sure

    Votes: 18 11.9%
  • No, they will sound the same

    Votes: 38 25.2%

  • Total voters
    151
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So the ear does some filtering, the speaker does some filtering other parts of the chain may do some filtering. It may be enough for the reconstruction to be accurate. If it is, then it would present to the ear/brain, the same signal as if you did the anti-imaging filtering at the DAC output and what the rest of the chain does make no difference. There certainly is no inherent reason it sound better to not filter, and let happenstance do the work.

I did not use un-reconstructed in my post. Only that you cannot properly reconstruct the signal without the filter. Maybe all the accidental filtering does the job to allow an accurate reconstruction at the ear compared to what the original recorded signal was or maybe it doesn't. We don't have to leave it to chance.

Don't forget the zero-order hold filtering. Most of the power in music is usually at low frequencies, the images of which get suppressed reasonably well by the notches of the sin(πf/fs)/(πf/fs) shaped response of the zero-order hold. It also causes some 3 dB of treble loss at the higher audio frequencies if the sample rate is low.

On the other hand, there are the imperfections of the reconstruction filter when you do use one. For a non-oversampling DAC with reconstruction filter, that will mostly be its poor phase response, for an oversampling DAC, clipping on intersample overshoots, pre- and post-echoes and quantization artefacts.

Of course you can design a digital interpolation filter such that it doesn't clip on intersample overshoots, has extremely small pre- and post-echoes and that the only quantization artefacts are those of a dithered rounding stage after the whole filter, but who knows what was done in the oversampling filters of the DACs NIXIE62 compared his DAC to?

@NIXIE62 Do you use digital volume control? If so, all I wrote about intersample overshoots doesn't apply unless you play very loud.
 
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Post #1332 of the NOS DAC thread is the demonstration of what a NOS DAC with only zero-order hold filtering would sound like to a cat when playing 44.1 kHz-sample-rate recordings:

 
@931410: But NOS does, near enough for the intended application of human music listening, satisfy the Sampling Theorem. Why? Well, let’s take a closer look at some concepts. The term ‘unreconstructed’ is, to my mind, misleading. The raw, unfiltered, output of a DAC already contains the entire, fully completed and assembled analog audio base-band signal. The base-band doesn’t require ‘reconstruction’, or creation, as such. It only falsely appears to require that. To be incompleted. To just appears to still require recreation when viewed in the time-domain. Its full presence becomes obviously true when viewed in the frequency-domain. The audio base-band exists from, DC to the system Nyquist frequency, 22kHz for CD. The audio base-band exists along side the many ultrasonic image-bands, which are located mirror-folded above and below multiples of the sample rate. The base-band is merely falsely obscured, by the repeating image-bands, when viewed in the time-domain.

What reconstruction filtering does is to remove all the ultrasonic image-bands. Removal of the image-bands leaves only the signal base-band, and is what makes the signal now appear continuous rather than discrete, when viewed in the time-domain.

Back to NOS. The human ear is a biological reconstruction filter, regarding the application of digital audio. Because it filters away the ultrasonic image-bands, leaving the pass-band as ‘reconstructed’, per the Sampling Theorem. You can’t directly view the biological ‘reconstruction’ of an NOS signal, as far as I know, because it happens only after the ear converts the acoustic signal to a bio-electrical one. Again, the pass-band was always fully complete and present, it just that this fact is obscured by the additional presence of the image-bands.
You say: "...because it happens only after the ear converts the acoustic signal to a bio-electrical one."

I would have thought that it is during the conversion to a bio-electrical signal that the ultrasonics are lost.
 
I wonder if non filtered NOS DACs are popular only with older population having some HF hearing loss?
Research shows that 10 % of young population can hear above 20 kHz, if sound level is high enough.
https://pubs.aip.org/asa/jasa/artic...Hearing-thresholds-for-pure-tones-above-16kHz

This coincides with my experience. In group of 24 people, two were able to hear powered on ultrasonic alarm on the lab bench.
 
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Well then, you have yourself some test subjects to audition NOS vs OS techniques with
😉

I'd expect that even if you were capable of hearing up to 28 kHz, it would get masked by the rest of the music. Especially given the fact that for those higher frequencies to be audible, 110 dBspl was needed (yikes!).
 
You say: "...because it happens only after the ear converts the acoustic signal to a bio-electrical one."

I would have thought that it is during the conversion to a bio-electrical signal that the ultrasonics are lost.
What I mean is, somewhere in the process of conversion to a bio-electric signal. I have no objection to your viewing it as occurring during the conversion.
 
No and yes.

What does "to sound" really mean? Human brain is constatly imagining things, we are hallucinating all day every day from the time we are babies till the day we die. If you do A/B test that is not blind and one dac is cheap, small and ugly and other big, expensive and looks luxurious, the big one is going sound better to large percentage of people due to the placebo auditory hallucination effect.

Realisticly since noisefloor in average listening room is like 20-30db and maximum spl is 90-100db, we only need signal to noise and thd ratio of 60-80db for noise and distortion of dac to be completly inaudible which means 99.9% of dacs will sound same in blind test from the first TDA1541 r2r dacs to modern state of art AKM,Sabre, Cirrus delta sigma dacs.

DACs in current times are semi snakeoil, while there are measurable differences and in extreme cases like driving ultra sensitive IEMs and hearing noisefloor, the differences are below treshold of audibility and the reviewers are either lying to profit of affliate links or are hallucinating themselfs. In 2024 the build in dacs in motherboards, laptops or the 9€ Apple 3.5mm dongle are all audibly flawless.
 
What does "to sound" really mean? Human brain is constatly imagining things, we are hallucinating all day every day from the time we are babies till the day we die. If you do A/B test that is not blind and one dac is cheap, small and ugly and other big, expensive and looks luxurious, the big one is going sound better to large percentage of people due to the placebo auditory hallucination effect.

Realisticly since noisefloor in average listening room is like 20-30db and maximum spl is 90-100db, we only need signal to noise and thd ratio of 60-80db for noise and distortion of dac to be completly inaudible which means 99.9% of dacs will sound same in blind test from the first TDA1541 r2r dacs to modern state of art AKM,Sabre, Cirrus delta sigma dacs.

DACs in current times are semi snakeoil, while there are measurable differences and in extreme cases like driving ultra sensitive IEMs and hearing noisefloor, the differences are below treshold of audibility and the reviewers are either lying to profit of affliate links or are hallucinating themselfs. In 2024 the build in dacs in motherboards, laptops or the 9€ Apple 3.5mm dongle are all audibly flawless.
I agree. And amps are heading the same way at modest listening levels. Class D amps nowadays can measure extremely well for not much money. This means high-detail hifi listening as cheaper than it ever was. Loudspeakers and room acoustics are the biggest factors, with room acoustics being the hardest for most people to improve as most of us have limited living space and have to squeeze our hifi in somewhere.
 
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So the ear does some filtering, the speaker does some filtering other parts of the chain may do some filtering. It may be enough for the reconstruction to be accurate. If it is, then it would present to the ear/brain, the same signal as if you did the anti-imaging filtering at the DAC output and what the rest of the chain does make no difference. There certainly is no inherent reason it sound better to not filter, and let happenstance do the work.

I did not use un-reconstructed in my post. Only that you cannot properly reconstruct the signal without the filter. Maybe all the accidental filtering does the job to allow an accurate reconstruction at the ear compared to what the original recorded signal was or maybe it doesn't. We don't have to leave it to chance.
I agree, that there is no inherent reason why NOS should sound better than OS. It seems like they should barely sound different at all. An exploration of why they do sound different in practice, however, was the purpose of that 2021 NOS thread which Marcel linked. What was indicated (not scientifically proven) is that the primary reason for the subjective character difference between OS and NOS is due to the, somehow, insufficient implementation of typical, DAC co-resident, silicon resourced digital interpolation FIR filters. I say, somehow, as Marcel had designed a listening test to explore what appeared to be the most likely candidate cause (per, Lagadec), but that test was hampered by test participant/set-up control difficulties.

By the conclusion of that NOS thread, what I personally found most interesting was that NOS and sophisticated PC s/w interpolation, sounded much more alike than either of them did to typical, DAC silicon co-resident, half-band, equirpple FIR interpolation filters. In other words, typical, DAC co-resident silicon FIR filters were implicated as the culprit in producing the subjective difference between OS and NOS, and not FIR filtering itself. Which, presumably, is due to their utilization of silicon processing architecture designed to conserve chip area. That’s only conjecture, though. So, for many of us DAC hobbyists, bypassing the DAC’s on-chip FIR filter results in a subjective character near that of a sophisticated s/w interpolator, and superior the DAC’s co-resident digital filter.
 
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Nope. That was looong time ago and I was one of those two. Now, 16 kHz is out of my reach. :rofl:
Same here, though my hearing nowadays runs out at somewhere between 10 kHz and 12 kHz, and according to a test I did is typical for my age. I guess all those moving parts inside the ears are also getting a bit stiffer with age.
When I was young I coud hear all the way up to the 20 kHz test tone on my 99 track Denon test CD. So it stands to reason the curve had only started to roll off and extended a bit further up the spectrum.

My interpretation of your question was whether people able to hear well above 20 kHz would dislike NOS. rs Perhaps there are some youngsters here who could chime in?
 
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