Azazel Posted February 7, 2010 Report Posted February 7, 2010 This one, "Taralabs"... Native 24bit 96k USB to Spdif I2S Converter for DAC - eBay (item 270517709517 end time Feb-17-10 17:30:38 PST) ... but I read "Teralabs". Whatever, it does use the Tenor chip, like the Prodigy Cube I am using now, but it is a simpler desing (no DAC inside so no line outs and no headphone out) with the option of off-board power supply. I am happy with my unit (does native 24/96 and changes the sampling frequency on the fly with foobar) save for a problem with some 24/88'2 files (does not recognise the 88'2 fq). But "no drivers" makes me happy... Anyone to test it? Padam were you not looking for something like that?
padam Posted February 7, 2010 Report Posted February 7, 2010 I need to set up the Parasound first but it hasn't arrived yet, then decide whether this or the HiFace.
Azazel Posted February 7, 2010 Author Report Posted February 7, 2010 Yups, remember the Parasound does not go higher than 48kHz: you can use a simpler adapter with it (even put inside the case to avoid one more connection), there are many around based on the 270X chips for around $30. The beauty of this "Taralab" (sic) is going up to 96kHz with no drivers. The beauty of the HiFace looks to lie on its layout and clocks.
padam Posted February 11, 2010 Report Posted February 11, 2010 Yes I know, but the asynchronous data transfer should provide an advantage on 16bit as well. Or maybe I am wrong
Voltron Posted February 11, 2010 Report Posted February 11, 2010 The thing seems to be called "TeraLink X2" and the company is TeraDak Audio Electric Company. Tera Labs makes audio cables only as far as I know.
cetoole Posted February 11, 2010 Report Posted February 11, 2010 Yes I know, but the asynchronous data transfer should provide an advantage on 16bit as well. Or maybe I am wrong You aren't.
digger945 Posted February 12, 2010 Report Posted February 12, 2010 Yes I know, but the asynchronous data transfer should provide an advantage on 16bit as well. Or maybe I am wrong You aren't. Indeed. I have experienced much improvement using async usb to spdif from 16/44 to 24/96.
padam Posted February 12, 2010 Report Posted February 12, 2010 The main problem with the HiFace is that one cannot use magic USB cables with it
manaox2 Posted February 12, 2010 Report Posted February 12, 2010 The main problem with the HiFace is that one cannot use magic USB cables with it You just have to order it terminated to USB-A female; waiting for the someone that will do this and actually end up only lowering their bandwidth and getting farther from spec.
rogue Posted February 12, 2010 Report Posted February 12, 2010 Good to see more cheap async USB SPDIF converters coming out. $900 for a wavelink is just nutso. FWIW, I'm very happy with my HiFace.
Currawong Posted February 18, 2010 Report Posted February 18, 2010 From what I gather though, the Tenor chip is unreliable according to the maker of the chip themselves, something re-enforced by my Audiotrak Prodigy Cube (which uses one) dying on me soon after I bought it.
rogue Posted February 18, 2010 Report Posted February 18, 2010 From what I gather though, the Tenor chip is unreliable according to the maker of the chip themselves, something re-enforced by my Audiotrak Prodigy Cube (which uses one) dying on me soon after I bought it. Heh. Buggy chips are pretty commonplace, but it's rare to hear of silicon that just dies outright. Is this because of overheating, or something else entirely?
Azazel Posted February 18, 2010 Author Report Posted February 18, 2010 I do have a Prodigy Cube working fine since many months ago... bad luck Curra??
Currawong Posted February 19, 2010 Report Posted February 19, 2010 Could be that too, but this supposedly came from Tenor themselves. I figured it was worth noting in case anyone intends to buy one.
Spiug31 Posted April 8, 2010 Report Posted April 8, 2010 just a note to say I am using the "Teralink-X" at present (reinterpreting usb into spdif/bnc to feed the buffalo), it is still settling in but currently is at around 80 hours playing time. In windows vista it has been and is buggy, sometimes it just doesn`t output a digital feed, don`t know why as the pc clearly shows it is recognised and being fed the audio :shrug: . In Linux (Opensuse 11.2, my main OS) it has shown no bugs and is fully plug and play
Shahrose Posted April 15, 2010 Report Posted April 15, 2010 I've used the Teralink-X2 with good results. It definitely colours the sound though. Warm, smooth, large soundstage. Not as transparent as the M2Tech hiFace but more pleasing IMO.
n_maher Posted April 15, 2010 Report Posted April 15, 2010 I've used the Teralink-X2 with good results. It definitely colours the sound though. Warm, smooth, large soundstage. Not as transparent as the M2Tech hiFace but more pleasing IMO. I would not say that a USB-SPDIF converter that colors the sound is a "good result".
Shahrose Posted April 15, 2010 Report Posted April 15, 2010 I would not say that a USB-SPDIF converter that colors the sound is a "good result". more like "malfunctioning product." Both valid points, but some will prefer its MO just like some prefer the coloration of certain tube amps over SS.
grawk Posted April 15, 2010 Report Posted April 15, 2010 you won't find a lot of support for random "broken is better" products here...
grawk Posted April 15, 2010 Report Posted April 15, 2010 true enough. I was specifically talking about audio gear
valesina Posted April 22, 2010 Report Posted April 22, 2010 Perhaps we could compile a list of the growing number of USB > SPDIF converters out there, from the CryoParts/Pop Pulse thing right up to the megabucks versions: seems to be the flavor of the month.
Spiug31 Posted July 14, 2010 Report Posted July 14, 2010 just a note to say I am using the "Teralink-X" at present (reinterpreting usb into spdif/bnc to feed the buffalo), it is still settling in but currently is at around 80 hours playing time. In windows vista it has been and is buggy, sometimes it just doesn`t output a digital feed, don`t know why as the pc clearly shows it is recognised and being fed the audio :shrug: . In Linux (Opensuse 11.2, my main OS) it has shown no bugs and is fully plug and play The Vista reliability problem got solved once I installed the C-media driver rather than the default vista one - it is no longer buggy. Sound quality is still less impressive than I get natively in linux but good enough for light gaming and background/burn-in music. Playing via Linux remains the way I listen to flac/streamed music
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