Taiko Audio SGM Extreme : the Crème de la Crème

John T

Well-Known Member
Feb 15, 2022
1,049
1,620
198
67
I heard $350.00 option? if I knew about it, I would have gotten it. Although the double cardboard box was no worse for ware. Most all my other pieces came in flight cases...
 

John T

Well-Known Member
Feb 15, 2022
1,049
1,620
198
67
@MarkusBarkus: LOL!!!! Great idea!! Big box small contents! John
 

Steve Williams

Site Founder, Site Owner, Administrator
That is gorgeous!

It makes me a bit nostalgic for the semi battered cardboard box that traveled the six thousand miles here 2.5 years ago. That Extreme was still perfectly protected, sound asleep and continues to operate flawlessly to this day. That all said, that case looks fantastic and surely bomb proof.

Looking forward to all that Taiko has in store in the coming months!
I too like the flight case but let's face it, "it isn't the flight case we existing users are waiting for ":D
 

microstrip

VIP/Donor
May 30, 2010
20,807
4,700
2,790
Portugal
I would be much happier getting XDMS than a flight case. To be true, I dislike them. I prefer getting equipment is a simple wood crate or rugged card box- something that does not include plastic or metal. But surely YMMV.

Some wood crates are great - we can disassemble them with an electric screwdriver in a few minutes and then they take little space to store.
 

Kris

Well-Known Member
Mar 4, 2019
951
973
183
Yes…..significant improvement is also observed from disabling vbus of the USB card in my system.

Cheers.
How you did it ? .
I had to cover ground and vbus in my USB cable to get simmilar efferct a week ago.
 

Taiko Audio

Industry Expert
Feb 10, 2017
4,276
13,282
1,925
The Netherlands
taikoaudio.com
Last(?) questions for now (while on vacation)

For locally stored music, I'm assuming that this external stuff to improve streaming on the network is a non- factor?

Do you have an xdms fix or strategy for eliminating the SQ degradation of FLAC format?

While vlan are not needed for SQ in your strategy, I still have to do this for home security/iot reasons? Any recommendations on things not to do?

It affects local streaming as well. There is indeed a strategy for XDMS, not fully resilient yet but I'm confident we'll get there. If you have the option to use untagged VLANs I'd pick that.
 

Taiko Audio

Industry Expert
Feb 10, 2017
4,276
13,282
1,925
The Netherlands
taikoaudio.com
Have any WBF brothers noticed that there is another Emile/Taiko Audio new invention for the Extreme Server?
:p

This Extreme flight case is fabulous!
Emile : you are super!
:cool:

Happy you like it :)

How does one get one of those flight cases

You can order one, they are an Euro 300 option, shipping cost is indeed steep though as @CKKeung indicated.
 

Taiko Audio

Industry Expert
Feb 10, 2017
4,276
13,282
1,925
The Netherlands
taikoaudio.com
Some wood crates are great - we can disassemble them with an electric screwdriver in a few minutes and then they take little space to store.

We have used crates for a very short time, if customs can't open the packages they drill holes into it to insert drug checking probes! They damaged 6 or 7 extremes that way.
 
  • Wow
Reactions: Zeotrope and ctydwn

Johnny Moondog

Well-Known Member
Oct 30, 2014
71
110
265
Have any WBF brothers noticed that there is another Emile/Taiko Audio new invention for the Extreme Server?
I am ... “The Man From F.O.M.O.”
 
  • Like
Reactions: oldmustang

John T

Well-Known Member
Feb 15, 2022
1,049
1,620
198
67
I thought that hole in the side of my unit was for ventilation...Oh!
 

ACHiPo

Well-Known Member
Feb 22, 2015
518
309
310
Pleasanton, CA
No flight case, but that doesn't drown my enthusiasm for the delayed, but arrived, Extreme!
 

Attachments

  • IMG_0496.JPG
    IMG_0496.JPG
    1.3 MB · Views: 64

stretchneck

Well-Known Member
Apr 24, 2020
30
6
73
47
Dear sirs,
always late to a party, I contemplate acquiring a Taiko extreme.

I mostly own old stuff, but I do like it.
Unable to use my turntable (pump for Airtangent …) and Scintillas (room restrictions), I set up my JRDG Coherence II and a model 8 with equally vintage Monitor Audio speakers to bring music back into my life, sorely missed.
A Denon DVD player bought years ago for home theater use … didn’t sound that good.
I held my breath and bought a T+A SD 3100 hv, as it is a streamer, dac and headphone amp, all decent, in a single box. Added a decent headphone.
I started streaming Qobuz, as I had no intention to put countless CDs next to some 5500 lps (all in boxes stored away, sigh).
Some tweaking helped, music is listenable and a pleasure again.

Having read pages 1-250 and 450 - 576, I have the nagging feeling that I “need” a Taiko extreme.
A few questions still remain:

SD 3100 hv owners do prefer USB with their Taiko as most Taiko owners do?
Which cables do they prefer?
USB cable with or without power needed or preferred?

While I have no chance in this mountainous region to compare decent USB cables, Sablon gets many recommendations here.
What would be the recommended length?

Power cord:
I remember posts here recommending the Oyaide C 004 IEC plug to match the Extreme‘s socket better than Furutech.
I consider a power cable with this Oyaide C 004, but a Furutech NCF Schuko to match the Furutech NCF Schuko receptacles which get installed in my future home, relocation planned in 5 years.
Better go all Oyaide for this cable?
Anyone using an Acoustic Revive 18000 power cable with the Extreme?
(trying to cheap out again :) ).
Better use a Kimber pk 10 palladian with gold Wattgates? I already have one of these.

I am fully aware that many questions I asked are depending on personal taste and may change with different setting, but your input is highly welcome!

Greetings from Engadin!
Try Network acoustics Muon… it’s current cream of the crop at the moment IMO (please note that I haven’t tried it on TAIKO extreme, just my own DIY server with TAIKO parts).
 

oldmustang

Well-Known Member
Dec 1, 2012
1,061
3,142
1,445
No flight case, but that doesn't drown my enthusiasm for the delayed, but arrived, Extreme!
Congratulations!

I'm still feeling left out. Years ago now when my Extreme arrived it was sitting on my doorstep in a cardboard box. Neatly taped and double-boxed, but no pallet, no shipping straps, no plastic shrink-wrap.

But those were more innocent times, back when dinosaurs still roamed the earth. . .

Steve Z
 

rau

Well-Known Member
Aug 6, 2015
580
651
345
Wisconsin
Congratulations!

I'm still feeling left out. Years ago now when my Extreme arrived it was sitting on my doorstep in a cardboard box. Neatly taped and double-boxed, but no pallet, no shipping straps, no plastic shrink-wrap.

But those were more innocent times, back when dinosaurs still roamed the earth. . .

Steve Z
That's how I got mine also
 

Christiaan Punter

Well-Known Member
Hi all, since having the Extreme in my system, I have done a handful of reviews with it and several other experiments and comparisons. Every now and then, I will post some of my experiences here on WBF, if I think they can be helpful for Extreme owners.

After having reviewed the Final Touch Audio Sinope USB cable and Metis Ethernet cable, I liked both so much that I decided to keep them as personal references.

Just recently, I reviewed the Jorma USB Reference cable and the Jorma Ethernet cable and I'd like to share a summary of that experience. As always, I personally don't believe in any single "ideal" cable since it is always a matter of system synergy and user preference. But with the below, I hope to provide a nice bit of perspective.

Jorma USB Reference

Where the Taiko Extreme server is concerned, one can choose between TAS (Taiko Audio System) and Roon for music playback and there are sonic differences between the two solutions. This is why I used both TAS and Roon during my assessments. Fortunately, irrespective of the playback method, I heard precisely the same differences between the cables. For my USB cable assessments, I used both local and streaming Qobuz content.

My first impression is that the Jorma provides less incisiveness in the bass, which makes fast bass drum ghost notes appear less distinct. It has a more relaxed sound, less chunky and impactful, and less direct. While that may come across as a detracting factor, longer listening reveals that no detail is glossed over and after having listened to the Jorma for a while and then switching back to the FTA Sinope, the latter sounds comparatively "square" and staccato and a little matter-of-fact.

In return, the Jorma is airier and considerably more fluid, and like the FTA Sinope, the Jorma is incredibly neutral, yet also very natural, arguably more so than the admittedly quite strict Sinope. In addition, and this is something that you really start appreciating after listening for longer, while the Jorma is not strictly presenting the maximum in terms of chiseled-rock-kind of incisiveness, there is a decidedly "human" and organic quality to its presentation. I'd be tempted to use the term "analog" if that wouldn't conjure associations with overt lushness or rich creaminess.

The Jorma USB cable sounds significantly faster and tighter, as well as more incisive and more impactful than the Final Touch Audio Callisto or the Pink Faun Digital Interlink USB. The former has long been an HFA Favorite for its uniquely organic, ultra-refined, and utterly free-flowing presentation, even if it was not the last word in terms of bass solidity and slam. The latter is remarkable for sounding smoother, lusher, and richer than the Callisto whilst having a similarly organic and free-flowing presentation. But just as with the Callisto, you pay the price in the bass department.

With the Jorma USB Reference, there is never the impression of trading one quality for another and that is really the best compliment that I can give a cable.

Jorma Ethernet

For the Ethernet cable tests, I made sure to start with a Qobuz streaming source so that we actually have music flowing through the cable... although, with the Extreme, do we really listen to the stream directly? Certainly, with TAS, the server first buffers the stream and then plays from memory. This is another reason why I made sure to not only use TAS but also Roon.

Retaining the Jorma USB Reference cable and adding the Jorma Ethernet cable to the Taiko server in place of the OEM CAT6 cable makes for an absolutely dramatic increase in soundstage width and depth as well as a further increase in fluidity and flow. In addition, the singers and instruments gain deeper tonal saturation, leading to a meatier sound and more body within the soundstage, which further helps develop deeper 3D imaging.

Like the Jorma USB cable, but slightly more so, the Ethernet cable provides a presentation that is focused on the natural musical flow, rather than going out of its way to provide the utmost in terms of solidity and chiseled-rock-like bass. This is in line with what one expects from a Jorma cable: natural musicality with high resolution and a high level of refinement. While the Jorma USB cable by itself is perfectly centered between relaxed and free-flowing on the one hand and fast and incisive on the other, the Jorma Ethernet cable does lean more toward the relaxed side.

So far, I have been playing only from Qobuz. I know I'm going to be called out for this, but indeed, I hear the same differences between the cables when playing music that is stored locally on the server. Moreover, I hear this with TAS as well as with Roon. This supports the growing suspicion that it's not so much the data stream itself but rather superimposed factors that are messing with what we hear as the end result.

Swapping from the Jorma Ethernet cable to the FTA Metis Ethernet cable, the sound becomes more solid and impactful, as well as less organic, stricter, and more direct, in fact quite similar to the FTA Sinope USB cable. It's interesting how these two brands offer very different perspectives that are upheld through the different connections.

I contemplated also including a test with the Jorma Ethernet cable connected directly between the server and the DAC but I know from earlier experience that the Extreme sounds better via USB, so that would not have yielded helpful insights.

Swapping to the Pink Faun Digital Link LAN introduces yet another perspective, even richer, more liquid, and more free-flowing than the Jorma. In another setup than mine, one that verges on clinical or over-controlled, this can likely be an absolute blessing but in the context of my system, this cable pulls the sound too much toward mellow and relaxed. Like the Pink Faun USB cable, the LAN cable is lush at the expense of propulsion, momentum, and rhythmic expression.

If also taking the OEM Cat6 cable into account then that cable would be positioned all the way over on the other end of the spectrum with lots of control but a bleak tonality and a flat and kind of forward soundstage. So here's the million-dollar question. Is the OEM Cat6 cable leaving out harmonics and fullness or allowing lots of malicious noise to come through, or is it simply relaying the truth, warts and all? In other words, are the high-end Ethernet cables beautifying the signal or do they provide a more truthful rendition? Honestly, I have no way of knowing and I'm afraid it comes down primarily to personal taste and system synergy. What cannot be denied, however, is that Ethernet cables really do matter, a lot, actually.

So, where does this leave the Jorma Ethernet cable on the sonic landscape? Well, if the Pink Faun is relaxed and mellow and the Final Touch Audio is strict and upfront, the Jorma falls in between but is positioned more toward the Pink Faun than the Final Touch Audio. In terms of tonality, I'd consider all three to be neutral, in spite of their large other differences. So far, it seems that an Ethernet cable is not capable of truly changing the tonality of a system. It can, however, strongly affect the balance between control and flow, and with it, the emotional involvement.
 
Last edited:

EuroDriver

Well-Known Member
Sep 16, 2015
926
2,479
450
Monaco
Hi all, since having the Extreme in my system, I have done a handful of reviews with it and several other experiments and comparisons. Every now and then, I will post some of my experiences here on WBF, if I think they can be helpful for Extreme owners.

After having reviewed the Final Touch Audio Sinope USB cable and Metis Ethernet cable, I liked both so much that I decided to keep them as personal references.

Just recently, I reviewed the Jorma USB Reference cable and the Jorma Ethernet cable (HFA review forthcoming) and I'd like to share a summary of that experience. As always, I personally don't believe in any single "ideal" cable since it is always a matter of system synergy and user preference. But with the below, I hope to provide a nice bit of perspective.

Jorma USB Reference

Where the Taiko Extreme server is concerned, one can choose between TAS (Taiko Audio System) and Roon for music playback and there are sonic differences between the two solutions. This is why I used both TAS and Roon during my assessments. Fortunately, irrespective of the playback method, I heard precisely the same differences between the cables. For my USB cable assessments, I used both local and streaming Qobuz content.

My first impression is that the Jorma provides less incisiveness in the bass, which makes fast bass drum ghost notes appear less distinct. It has a more relaxed sound, less chunky and impactful, and less direct. While that may come across as a detracting factor, longer listening reveals that no detail is glossed over and after having listened to the Jorma for a while and then switching back to the FTA Sinope, the latter sounds comparatively "square" and staccato and a little matter-of-fact.

In return, the Jorma is airier and considerably more fluid, and like the FTA Sinope, the Jorma is incredibly neutral, yet also very natural, arguably more so than the admittedly quite strict Sinope. In addition, and this is something that you really start appreciating after listening for longer, while the Jorma is not strictly presenting the maximum in terms of chiseled-rock-kind of incisiveness, there is a decidedly "human" and organic quality to its presentation. I'd be tempted to use the term "analog" if that wouldn't conjure associations with overt lushness or rich creaminess.

The Jorma USB cable sounds significantly faster and tighter, as well as more incisive and more impactful than the Final Touch Audio Callisto or the Pink Faun Digital Interlink USB. The former has long been an HFA Favorite for its uniquely organic, ultra-refined, and utterly free-flowing presentation, even if it was not the last word in terms of bass solidity and slam. The latter is remarkable for sounding smoother, lusher, and richer than the Callisto whilst having a similarly organic and free-flowing presentation. But just as with the Callisto, you pay the price in the bass department.

With the Jorma USB Reference, there is never the impression of trading one quality for another and that is really the best compliment that I can give a cable.

Jorma Ethernet

For the Ethernet cable tests, I made sure to start with a Qobuz streaming source so that we actually have music flowing through the cable... although, with the Extreme, do we really listen to the stream directly? Certainly, with TAS, the server first buffers the stream and then plays from memory. This is another reason why I made sure to not only use TAS but also Roon.

Retaining the Jorma USB Reference cable and adding the Jorma Ethernet cable to the Taiko server in place of the OEM CAT6 cable makes for an absolutely dramatic increase in soundstage width and depth as well as a further increase in fluidity and flow. In addition, the singers and instruments gain deeper tonal saturation, leading to a meatier sound and more body within the soundstage, which further helps develop deeper 3D imaging.

Like the Jorma USB cable, but slightly more so, the Ethernet cable provides a presentation that is focused on the natural musical flow, rather than going out of its way to provide the utmost in terms of solidity and chiseled-rock-like bass. This is in line with what one expects from a Jorma cable: natural musicality with high resolution and a high level of refinement. While the Jorma USB cable by itself is perfectly centered between relaxed and free-flowing on the one hand and fast and incisive on the other, the Jorma Ethernet cable does lean more toward the relaxed side.

So far, I have been playing only from Qobuz. I know I'm going to be called out for this, but indeed, I hear the same differences between the cables when playing music that is stored locally on the server. Moreover, I hear this with TAS as well as with Roon. This supports the growing suspicion that it's not so much the data stream itself but rather superimposed factors that are messing with what we hear as the end result.

Swapping from the Jorma Ethernet cable to the FTA Metis Ethernet cable, the sound becomes more solid and impactful, as well as less organic, stricter, and more direct, in fact quite similar to the FTA Sinope USB cable. It's interesting how these two brands offer very different perspectives that are upheld through the different connections.

I contemplated also including a test with the Jorma Ethernet cable connected directly between the server and the DAC but I know from earlier experience that the Extreme sounds better via USB, so that would not have yielded helpful insights.

Swapping to the Pink Faun Digital Link LAN introduces yet another perspective, even richer, more liquid, and more free-flowing than the Jorma. In another setup than mine, one that verges on clinical or over-controlled, this can likely be an absolute blessing but in the context of my system, this cable pulls the sound too much toward mellow and relaxed. Like the Pink Faun USB cable, the LAN cable is lush at the expense of propulsion, momentum, and rhythmic expression.

If also taking the OEM Cat6 cable into account then that cable would be positioned all the way over on the other end of the spectrum with lots of control but a bleak tonality and a flat and kind of forward soundstage. So here's the million-dollar question. Is the OEM Cat6 cable leaving out harmonics and fullness or allowing lots of malicious noise to come through, or is it simply relaying the truth, warts and all? In other words, are the high-end Ethernet cables beautifying the signal or do they provide a more truthful rendition? Honestly, I have no way of knowing and I'm afraid it comes down primarily to personal taste and system synergy. What cannot be denied, however, is that Ethernet cables really do matter, a lot, actually.

So, where does this leave the Jorma Ethernet cable on the sonic landscape? Well, if the Pink Faun is relaxed and mellow and the Final Touch Audio is strict and upfront, the Jorma falls in between but is positioned more toward the Pink Faun than the Final Touch Audio. In terms of tonality, I'd consider all three to be neutral, in spite of their large other differences. So far, it seems that an Ethernet cable is not capable of truly changing the tonality of a system. It can, however, strongly affect the balance between control and flow, and with it, the emotional involvement.
Thank You Christiaan for so many data points,

Fascinating report, clearly many hours of carefull evaluation
 

About us

  • What’s Best Forum is THE forum for high end audio, product reviews, advice and sharing experiences on the best of everything else. This is THE place where audiophiles and audio companies discuss vintage, contemporary and new audio products, music servers, music streamers, computer audio, digital-to-analog converters, turntables, phono stages, cartridges, reel-to-reel tape machines, speakers, headphones and tube and solid-state amplification. Founded in 2010 What’s Best Forum invites intelligent and courteous people of all interests and backgrounds to describe and discuss the best of everything. From beginners to life-long hobbyists to industry professionals, we enjoy learning about new things and meeting new people, and participating in spirited debates.

Quick Navigation

User Menu

Steve Williams
Site Founder | Site Owner | Administrator
Ron Resnick
Site Co-Owner | Administrator
Julian (The Fixer)
Website Build | Marketing Managersing