Murat,
If you power your entire system from the Pure Power, I would try powering the Trinity DAC directly from the wall, leaving the rest of the system powered from the Pure Power. The Trinity PSU is so well filtered/regulated, that AC quality makes very little difference. The only problem is some noise that is generated in the PSU that gets injected back to the AC line.
This is the same problem you have with the Aurender W-20 for example, or any other component that uses a SMPS for that matter (Meitner, Playback Design, Linn etc).
Luckily, it can be easily solved. Just plug the Trinity into a separate filter, or power all other components from a filter.
As for the MSB DAC Select - I didn't have a chance to listen to neither Select mk I nor Select mk II.
I seriously doubt the Select mk I DAC can challenge the Trinity, as it is almost identical to DAC IV Diamond Plus with Galaxy Clock I had, and the performance gap between the two was really BIG.
The Select II is a completely new design, and that one, potentially, could be a challenger. But at $89.900 (or $99.990 with the upgraded clock), I do not feel the urge to try it. IMO the Trinity DAC at $56k is crazy expensive, but close to $100k for a DAC is just obscene.
If you power your entire system from the Pure Power, I would try powering the Trinity DAC directly from the wall, leaving the rest of the system powered from the Pure Power. The Trinity PSU is so well filtered/regulated, that AC quality makes very little difference. The only problem is some noise that is generated in the PSU that gets injected back to the AC line.
This is the same problem you have with the Aurender W-20 for example, or any other component that uses a SMPS for that matter (Meitner, Playback Design, Linn etc).
Luckily, it can be easily solved. Just plug the Trinity into a separate filter, or power all other components from a filter.
As for the MSB DAC Select - I didn't have a chance to listen to neither Select mk I nor Select mk II.
I seriously doubt the Select mk I DAC can challenge the Trinity, as it is almost identical to DAC IV Diamond Plus with Galaxy Clock I had, and the performance gap between the two was really BIG.
The Select II is a completely new design, and that one, potentially, could be a challenger. But at $89.900 (or $99.990 with the upgraded clock), I do not feel the urge to try it. IMO the Trinity DAC at $56k is crazy expensive, but close to $100k for a DAC is just obscene.