Introducing Olympus & Olympus I/O - A new perspective on modern music playback

When I ordered my DCD router and switch, I ordered them in silver. When I ordered the Olympus, I also ordered it in silver, but since they said the delivery time for the black ones might be shorter, I switched to black. When the Olympus arrived, I couldn't have been happier; I loved the black finish. Now that I see your DCD router and switch in black, I think they look much better (in my opinion).
I ended up doing the exact same dance with Taiko in order to get my O + I/O, so now I have a "salt and pepper" aesthetic in their products. Fits in with the rest of the not-so-coherent visuals on my system. Fortunately, I really only care much about the sound.
 
Since we’re showing our Taiko gear in situ…

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(All images posted and thread replies by myself will be removed when Rhapsody “goes dark” at the end of the year due to forum advertising rules.)
 
Since we’re showing our Taiko gear in situ…

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(All images posted and thread replies by myself will be removed when Rhapsody “goes dark” at the end of the year due to forum advertising rules.)
Stunningly beautiful system, Bob, and love the setting Arnold's (@coreaudiodesigns) lovely racks provide! We get to hang every now and then when he comes up for air as he lives a tad south of us. Just a wonderful, talented person!
 
Stunningly beautiful system, Bob, and love the setting Arnold's (@coreaudiodesigns) lovely racks provide! We get to hang every now and then when he comes up for air as he lives a tad south of us. Just a wonderful, talented person!
Yep, I’ve used Core Audio racks and stands almost exclusively. His (Arnold’s) latest are really beautiful. I agree, Arnold is the kind of fella most enjoyable doing business with. Just a wonderful guy.
 
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I am currently running pink noise on a loop from a shared network drive (on another windows computer). I see this in Roon (I am remotely connected to the PC with the Roon remote):

The track progression (red box I have highlighted) seems to be stuck, but on the playlist, I see the tiny bars moving up and down (green box I have highlighted)

My question is if the music is really playing or is it paused? Because I am travelling, I do not have a way to remotely confirm if there is sound.

If I hit the pause button, the UI responds and turns to the play triangle, the tiny bars on the playlist go flat. If I hit play, the track progression is still stuck, and the tiny bars start moving again. I want to believe the music is actually being played and the XDMI Analog DAC is burning-in ..

Has anyone else seen this or similar? It has been a couple of years since I used Roon.
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I am currently running pink noise on a loop from a shared network drive (on another windows computer). I see this in Roon (I am remotely connected to the PC with the Roon remote):

The track progression (red box I have highlighted) seems to be stuck, but on the playlist, I see the tiny bars moving up and down (green box I have highlighted)

My question is if the music is really playing or is it paused? Because I am travelling, I do not have a way to remotely confirm if there is sound.

If I hit the pause button, the UI responds and turns to the play triangle, the tiny bars on the playlist go flat. If I hit play, the track progression is still stuck, and the tiny bars start moving again. I want to believe the music is actually being played and the XDMI Analog DAC is burning-in ..

Has anyone else seen this or similar? It has been a couple of years since I used Roon.
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Just hit the forward button to advance to the next track. I have “roon radio” playing and occasionally mine stops (without the “connection dropped” message.) I just move to the next track (forward button) and all is well. When I’ve looped like you’re doing it doesn’t seem to have any impact vs Roon radio. Occasionally the song stops. To my knowledge is being researched and/or a fix is already in the works, but rollout hasn’t yet been announced.
 
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Current status of networking gear:
We’re making good progress clearing the backlog. Assuming no machine failures or staff absences, all chassis for current orders should finish machining within 2.5 weeks. After that, they’ll move to sanding, polishing, and finishing.

We’ve recently hired two new team members to boost capacity, and small batches are already returning from our external finishing partners. We’re confident that we’ll have the entire backlog (up to one week ago) cleared before Christmas, and we’re doing everything possible to expedite the process further.

Hi @Taiko Audio , is the prediction above still accurate?
 
I've now set up a direct local burn-in process. Just loaded one album directly on Olympus. I have a version without extra disk, so I had to pull an album from NAS into Olympus. Olympus is not providing a network share when no Music drive is presetn (quite logical).
This way I can run non-stop Roon without being impacted by NAS issues, network issues or some problems with Tidal or Qobuz.
 
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It’s been a few weeks now since I got my Olympus (no internal storage) and I/O (fitted w MSB ProISL module) so wanted to share my impressions so far.

My system: Taiko DSD (powered by Uptone JS-2), Router, and Switch > [was Extreme w internal storage + XDMS Alpha software > MSB ProUSB] > Select DAC > Soulution 701+ (upgraded) mono pre-amps in dual mode (Siltech single crystal XLR and speaker cables) > B&W 800 D3s, running off a dedicated subpanel with 50A cabling from main panel through to wall outlets (30A sub-panel breakers).

I was listening to basically red book format content via a mix of local storage and streamed Qobuz files (SQ preference for local storage) having previously used PGGB upsampled files ever since I had a Chord DAVE DAC some time ago (I preferred the red book files with XDMS on Extreme vs the upsampled files).

My first compliment to Taiko is regarding the quality packaging and general productization with the app interface, interactions are slick and it doesn’t feel like a computer at all. FedEx delivered at 3:30pm. I was up and running with music by 5:00pm, including getting the cases from outside the garage down to my basement, associated rests, and taking connecting things up deliberately slowly.

I’d read the manuals the night before (!), and everything worked first time, even connecting Roon via the Taiko Router to the low power single-SSD QNAP NAS powered by the Taiko DSD that is now my ‘local’ storage. I’ve kept the BMS's on the default re-charging schedule and haven't thought about it since day one. I did a ‘practise’ shutdown and re-start after a few days, just so the first time I did it wasn't when a storm is threatening (my very life today), again very easy.

Many others have talked about the qualities of the Olympus, but at the risk of repetition here’s my take.

My first listening impressions after the 90 minute gap between Extreme XDMS Alpha and Roon on the Olympus & IO was of being hit between the eyes by enormous clarity, detail, dynamics, and massive soundstage - the immediate improvements from the Extreme to the Olympus are not subtle ones. I did initially miss some engagement and delicacy I was getting with Extreme & XDMS alpha, but that came along pretty quickly with use.

An additional benefit of the lower noise floor is that I can turn the volume up higher, which further emphasises the dynamics and fantastic bass.

I joked to my friend that its difficult to move in the listening room for all the ‘veils’ that are now lying discarded on the floor. Trying to describe it sounds contradictory: its (in a positive way) very detailed and any particular element of a recording can be followed with ease, whilst also experiencing the flowing, engaging whole of a performance; there is delicacy to be had in the decay of cymbals and piano notes, but also brutality when its called for.

Olympus doesn’t turn the worst recordings into an audiophile dream, but it digs into them and I find makes them more enjoyable.

What the Olympus does do for me is make every other recording into ‘must listen’ experiences - you can effortlessly hear a long way ‘into’ the recorded performance. After that first rush of jumping between well-known ‘demo’ tracks subsided, I now really want to sit down and engage with all music for a much longer time.

Over the last 6 months or so, for reasons that are too long and boring to go into, I’ve experienced my Taiko journey over again in fast-forward, going from Roon on a laptop via USB to the MSB ProUSB (proving the adage rubbish in = rubbish out), using an intermediary BluSound streamer via Toslink, adding in the Taiko Switch, Router, & DCD, then the Extreme via its original USB, then the Taiko USB Card (I mistakenly plugged the USB cable into the original USB connector at first, forgetting about the USB card…), then adding the last iteration of XDMS Alpha to the Extreme in place of Roon.

The Switch / Router / DCD, Extreme itself, USB card, and XDMS were all significant steps forward.

I’d describe Olympus as a leap forward - Olympus / IO, BMS, and XDMI are outstanding achievements by Taiko, and I feel lucky to be able to experience them along with their Switch, Router, and DCD. It’s ‘digital done right’ - huge congratulations to the team!

Now I’ve got used to the Olympus, aside from listening to lots of music new and old, I’ve started getting curious again and been listening to streamed Qobuz FLAC vs FLAC from a Synology NAS with 4 HDDs on my wider network vs WAVs on the single-SSD QNAP NAS connected to the Router and powered by the DCD that’s also powering the Router and Switch. Its early days - I’m only comparing one album so far that I’m pretty sure has the same ‘provenance’ between versions - but I think I like the QNAP version better - livelier, and more focussed bass. I’ll experiment more to figure out whether that is due to WAV, the better DCD power, or both.

If this journey ended where I am now I’d be in a very happy place, but Taiko is obviously on a very productive trajectory and I have a feeling that there is more goodness to come.

I’ve never had a situation where ‘better’ power and lower noise hasn’t improved SQ, so:
  • I figure the more things I can get powered by BMS, the better …
    • V2 DAC card will be given a serious audition (I ideally want balanced outputs & volume control). Even if V2 turns out not to be 'it', I’m pretty sure some future version will be compelling.
    • the Taiko Router and Switch - in a separate IO, maybe...? (total guess)
  • the SQ delta of XDMS c.f. Roon on Extreme was significant for me, lower noise resulting in less harshness, better soundstage, more engagement - I was wondering if a similar impact on Olympus would be possible given the different CPU and design changes, and it was great to see @EuroDriver 's recent bullish post about that.
In conclusion - well done @Taiko Audio , thank you, and keep up the awesome work!
 
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