The usual areas where good analog beats digital in my experience: richness, transparency, more 3D, more alive. To be fair, it was Varese streaming vs good vinyl, and the gap was small .What kind of gap do you perceive?
The usual areas where good analog beats digital in my experience: richness, transparency, more 3D, more alive. To be fair, it was Varese streaming vs good vinyl, and the gap was small .What kind of gap do you perceive?
The usual areas where good analog beats digital in my experience: richness, transparency, more 3D, more alive. To be fair, it was Varese streaming vs good vinyl, and the gap was small .
Hi Zuman,Please regard this as a completely transparent and agenda-less question:
I've never heard a Varese and will certainly never be in a position to own one. But I'd like to hear some opinions regarding the level of system one would need to have for the Varese to deliver the type of "improvement" that so many have experienced.
For example, my modest system would be priced at about $65k or so if all components were new. If I replaced - just hypothetically - my Denafrips Terminator with a Varese, but kept my Modwright amp, Von Schweikert speakers, and Pachanko/HiFi Rose server and transport as-is, do you think I'd still note a substantive gain in the "gestalt" listening experience? Or would a thoroughbred like the Varese require similarly-elevated partners in order to reveal not its potential, but its ability to deliver the kind of clear, impressive, and positive difference that many have regarded as a paradigm shift.
One final clarification: I've heard other higher-end DACS in my system (Tambaqui, Rossini, Poseidon), and while I've clearly heard differences, none of them caused me to say "this changes everything." The impression I've received from many who've heard Varese is that it does "change everything..."
Thanks!
no doubt you have sufficient levels of clarity with the Von Schweikert and Modwright to easily hear the advantage of a (insert ultra$$$$ uber dac of your choice), even over the next level down in dacs. the real question would be whether those funds might be better applied to raise the net system performance with a slight step down in dac quality, but still spendy.Please regard this as a completely transparent and agenda-less question:
I've never heard a Varese and will certainly never be in a position to own one. But I'd like to hear some opinions regarding the level of system one would need to have for the Varese to deliver the type of "improvement" that so many have experienced.
For example, my modest system would be priced at about $65k or so if all components were new. If I replaced - just hypothetically - my Denafrips Terminator with a Varese, but kept my Modwright amp, Von Schweikert speakers, and Pachanko/HiFi Rose server and transport as-is, do you think I'd still note a substantive gain in the "gestalt" listening experience? Or would a thoroughbred like the Varese require similarly-elevated partners in order to reveal not its potential, but its ability to deliver the kind of clear, impressive, and positive difference that many have regarded as a paradigm shift.
One final clarification: I've heard other higher-end DACS in my system (Tambaqui, Rossini, Poseidon), and while I've clearly heard differences, none of them caused me to say "this changes everything." The impression I've received from many who've heard Varese is that it does "change everything..."
Thanks!
Well said as always. The only amendment I would personally make is that in each area of upgrade...I have made a personal commitment to 'go for it' as far as I can...and take a long-term approach to getting to flagship level (as defined by me for my personal ears). For me, that was the Zanden 4-box digital and I purposely avoided lots of opportunities to take those incremental steps...I went from a $50 Daewoo player for years and then went straight to a second-hand Zanden DAC. And then years after that to the latest 4-box Zanden (again second hand). And have never looked back for well well over a decade....12 years or more? I found for me this approach meant I did it once and did it right and did not look back. Where I have upgraded it has come a decade later or more (CJ/Gryphon to Robert Koda, or Wilson X1s to XLFs).no doubt you have sufficient levels of clarity with the Von Schweikert and Modwright to easily hear the advantage of a (insert ultra$$$$ uber dac of your choice), even over the next level down in dacs. the real question would be whether those funds might be better applied to raise the net system performance with a slight step down in dac quality, but still spendy.
for instance, maybe around a $75k-$100k dac (some great ones), and the other $150k+ spent on speaker/amp/turntable/cartridge upgrades. just as a loose template. or go digital only and put more funds into the speakers and amps. it might be a trade-off in some particular ways, but i think it would greatly favor the system advances.....maybe not the coolness factor of the tip top crazy good piece.
a rising tide raises all boats.
this system verses individual source upgrade is the question.
i agree. system building targets are personal. i know that the Zanden 4 box has been something you have heavily relied on and has done the job for you.Well said as always. The only amendment I would personally make is that in each area of upgrade...I have made a personal commitment to 'go for it' as far as I can...and take a long-term approach to getting to flagship level (as defined by me for my personal ears). For me, that was the Zanden 4-box digital and I purposely avoided lots of opportunities to take those incremental steps...I went from a $50 Daewoo player for years and then went straight to a second-hand Zanden DAC. And then years after that to the latest 4-box Zanden (again second hand). And have never looked back for well well over a decade....12 years or more? I found for me this approach meant I did it once and did it right and did not look back. Where I have upgraded it has come a decade later or more (CJ/Gryphon to Robert Koda, or Wilson X1s to XLFs).
Could you explain what "changes everything means to you"?ne final clarification: I've heard other higher-end DACS in my system (Tambaqui, Rossini, Poseidon), and while I've clearly heard differences, none of them caused me to say "this changes everything." The impression I've received from many who've heard Varese is that it does "change everything..."
Thanks!
Mike I have always admired your system and your tireless commitment to pushing the envelope but in a very very methodical and careful way. In my case, I am focusing quite heavily now on speakers and pushing to that next level of scale, ease and power. Something that most likely only a 4-tower or 4-piece can do.i agree. system building targets are personal. i know that the Zanden 4 box has been something you have heavily relied on and has done the job for you.
as enthusiasts it's hard to predict the future.....and just what all-in might mean for ourselves personally. rarely do we get to significantly upgrade a whole system. yet when adding any super big dollar piece to any relatively modest system we are faced with that dilemma.
i do agree with you that speakers are doing the heavy lifting in any system up to a particular point and that is where the most differences are heard. so big dollars should be used for that part of a system to give foundation to everything else. where is that particular point? everyone has their own opinion. how large is your room? what music do you listen to? driver type preference? SET? big solid state? the dynamic and frequency extension priorities/expectations drive these answers. maybe somewhere $50k-$100k should get you to a point of speaker diminishing returns. and used speakers might leave you with more dollars to use elsewhere without sacrificing much performance. plenty used to choose from.
A transrotor’s second top model with Swiss made tonearm and cartridge whose names I wasn’t familiar with. Pop/rock music was compared.Could you share what the vinyl set up was? And the music?
done many of those type compares.The usual areas where good analog beats digital in my experience: richness, transparency, more 3D, more alive. To be fair, it was Varese streaming vs good vinyl, and the gap was small .
pop/rock mostly will not be the genre revealing the top differences, but there are some super pop/rock pressings. and variances in tape transfer file quality too.A transrotor’s second top model with Swiss made tonearm and cartridge whose names I wasn’t familiar with. Pop/rock music was compared.
it will be exciting to see you go to the next level for speakers. your problem is you are already at such a level now the ante for a real upgrade is staggering.Mike I have always admired your system and your tireless commitment to pushing the envelope but in a very very methodical and careful way. In my case, I am focusing quite heavily now on speakers and pushing to that next level of scale, ease and power. Something that most likely only a 4-tower or 4-piece can do.
tempting toys to consider. your system can likely take full advantage of any of these 'cherry on top' moves. my time to play with stuff like that has apparently passed.I do perceive diminishing returns elsewhere in the system for me now. For example, I suppose the Tripoint Elite NG would be a great addition/upgrade along with Miguel's latest piece which are only now just coming out (see Audiocrack). I suppose Siltech Triple Crowns would be fun to trial across the entire system.
lots of ways to cut it and find incremental steps forward.But in truth, for me it is a question of how far I want to push the system with the existing XLFs (Wilson Crossover, dual Wilson Thors, Pure-Low panel subs or Funk Audio 18.2s)...or go for a complete 4-tower flagship to deliver true scale, effortlessness and power.
those could be more sideways for you with your Zanden than clearly forward. an interesting question. might be trade-offs. fun one to investigate.And this would absolutely come before something like a Wadax, Varese or Sentinel all of which I could well imagine are fantastic pieces.
Thank you! Your audio wisdom is rich and manifold. I will be sure to come back to you (and as you know, I already have) as the options narrow and timing approaches.it will be exciting to see you go to the next level for speakers. your problem is you are already at such a level now the ante for a real upgrade is staggering.
tempting toys to consider. your system can likely take full advantage of any of these 'cherry on top' moves. my time to play with stuff like that has passed.
lots of ways to cut it and find incremental steps forward.
those could be more sideways for you with your Zanden than clearly forward. an interesting question. might be trade-offs. fun one to investigate.
Please regard this as a completely transparent and agenda-less question:
I've never heard a Varese and will certainly never be in a position to own one. But I'd like to hear some opinions regarding the level of system one would need to have for the Varese to deliver the type of "improvement" that so many have experienced.
For example, my modest system would be priced at about $65k or so if all components were new. If I replaced - just hypothetically - my Denafrips Terminator with a Varese, but kept my Modwright amp, Von Schweikert speakers, and Pachanko/HiFi Rose server and transport as-is, do you think I'd still note a substantive gain in the "gestalt" listening experience? Or would a thoroughbred like the Varese require similarly-elevated partners in order to reveal not its potential, but its ability to deliver the kind of clear, impressive, and positive difference that many have regarded as a paradigm shift.
One final clarification: I've heard other higher-end DACS in my system (Tambaqui, Rossini, Poseidon), and while I've clearly heard differences, none of them caused me to say "this changes everything." The impression I've received from many who've heard Varese is that it does "change everything..."
Thanks!
My system is a little higher end than yours and all the components have been chosen after careful A/B comparisons. It is generally revealing of all the various audiophile tweaks etc.. Earlier this year I did a shootout with 6 DACs, 5 owned and one borrowed. All of them were different but the differences were generally less than I think you would hear between other major components. And I am in complete agreement with @LL21 post in this thread that extends this argument to the ultra high end. https://www.whatsbestforum.com/threads/dcs-varese-short-review.39573/post-1072447Please regard this as a completely transparent and agenda-less question:
I've never heard a Varese and will certainly never be in a position to own one. But I'd like to hear some opinions regarding the level of system one would need to have for the Varese to deliver the type of "improvement" that so many have experienced.
For example, my modest system would be priced at about $65k or so if all components were new. If I replaced - just hypothetically - my Denafrips Terminator with a Varese, but kept my Modwright amp, Von Schweikert speakers, and Pachanko/HiFi Rose server and transport as-is, do you think I'd still note a substantive gain in the "gestalt" listening experience? Or would a thoroughbred like the Varese require similarly-elevated partners in order to reveal not its potential, but its ability to deliver the kind of clear, impressive, and positive difference that many have regarded as a paradigm shift.
One final clarification: I've heard other higher-end DACS in my system (Tambaqui, Rossini, Poseidon), and while I've clearly heard differences, none of them caused me to say "this changes everything." The impression I've received from many who've heard Varese is that it does "change everything..."
Thanks!
Finally, if you haven't spent a lot of time and some money upgrading the power, cables, switches, clocks and sources that connect to your DAC you should do so. I found some of those changes to be as transformative as the difference between DACs and at a much lower cost.
Very kind, Paul1960. And I also agree with you that once a system's foundational parts (source, amplification, speakers) are set...there is indeed a whole 'world' of discovery in the true performance of that system when you start to look at: isolation, signal grounding, EMI/RFI shielding, room treatments (even relatively minor ones), and cabling. I think many who have not tried these might be surprised to find at least one if not most or all of these can reveal more about their original system than they might have imagined. And it is satisfying to really hone the original backbone of the system to really get it 'singing' (literally).My system is a little higher end than yours and all the components have been chosen after careful A/B comparisons. It is generally revealing of all the various audiophile tweaks etc.. Earlier this year I did a shootout with 6 DACs, 5 owned and one borrowed. All of them were different but the differences were generally less than I think you would hear between other major components. And I am in complete agreement with @LL21 post in this thread that extends this argument to the ultra high end. https://www.whatsbestforum.com/threads/dcs-varese-short-review.39573/post-1072447
Having heard the dCS Varese there is no question in my mind that you would hear a significant difference if it were in either of our systems but it costs almost 2.5x the new value of my system and 4x the value of your system and I also have no question that the extra money would be better spent elsewhere.
Finally, if you haven't spent a lot of time and some money upgrading the power, cables, switches, clocks and sources that connect to your DAC you should do so. I found some of those changes to be as transformative as the difference between DACs and at a much lower cost.
Please regard this as a completely transparent and agenda-less question:
I've never heard a Varese and will certainly never be in a position to own one. But I'd like to hear some opinions regarding the level of system one would need to have for the Varese to deliver the type of "improvement" that so many have experienced.
For example, my modest system would be priced at about $65k or so if all components were new. If I replaced - just hypothetically - my Denafrips Terminator with a Varese, but kept my Modwright amp, Von Schweikert speakers, and Pachanko/HiFi Rose server and transport as-is, do you think I'd still note a substantive gain in the "gestalt" listening experience? Or would a thoroughbred like the Varese require similarly-elevated partners in order to reveal not its potential, but its ability to deliver the kind of clear, impressive, and positive difference that many have regarded as a paradigm shift.
One final clarification: I've heard other higher-end DACS in my system (Tambaqui, Rossini, Poseidon), and while I've clearly heard differences, none of them caused me to say "this changes everything." The impression I've received from many who've heard Varese is that it does "change everything..."
Thanks!
WOW...now THAT is a commitment to digital! I have always respected DCS for what they did well...but never found myself compelled to consider them over the Zanden...just a personal preference, plus the cost of a new DCS is significant to boot.Good question the deserves an answer with many ""It depends".
It depends on how on someone valuates this hobby.
It depends on our preferences - there is no absolute best in this hobby. We have to consider if we like the dCS sound type.
It depends on how we rank the type of sources - if I personally considered that vinyl surpasses digital I would never spend such amount in a digital player.
As surely depends on system matching - I have no knowledge about how your system sounds.
But one thing is sure - for my preference the dCS Varese changed my listening for much better. As I am still installing in a new room, not yet optimized, not a better sound in ever aspect compared to the previous system and room , but surely much more music, something I valuate a lot. And surely the promise of a lot of enjoyment fiddling the room and system.
Disclaimer - in order to seem less unreasonable in this insane hobby I sold most of my expensive vinyl playing system to finance the jump from Vivaldi to Varese.
But intuitively, the Varese seems different to me. There is something about the continuous and consistent choice of words people use to describe it...not something I have consistently ever noticed about prior generations of DCS going all the way back to the Elgar Plus. Those that admire this newest generation seems to use words like color, depth, saturation, almost organic...while never failing to deliver the detail, nuance and pure information that DCS has always delivered.
(...) while never failing to deliver the detail, nuance and pure information that DCS has always delivered.

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