D/A Converter
Phasemation
Manufacturer: Kyodo Denshi Engineering Co., Ltd. |
hen I think about Phasemation I see a picture in front of my eyes of an older gentleman, the CEO of this company, standing next to the TechDAS Air Force One turntable gently lowering stylus to the groove. That's a picture, to be exact, from a „Stereo Sound” magazine, and since the size of that picture is quite small I can't be quite sure but it seems that it's a stylus of either his top cartridge PP-1000, or its predecessor P-1G. Phasemation, a company that has a separate brand on Japanese market called Phase-Tech, is widely recognized as an „analogue specialist”, as they've been providing customers for years with excellent cartridges and phonostages. One of these products that don't really fit into Phasemation's „analogue” image is a HD-7A192 D/A Converter. There are few versions of this device and one can find it only on Japanese web-page of Phase-Tech, but it sports something that immediately attracts attention: a digital K2 filter. This DAC sports two S/PDIF inputs, a coaxial RCA and optical Toslink. The former accepts signal up to 24 bits and 192 kHz, the latter up to 24/96. There is another input, important enough to have it described already on the packaging as: „USB Audio Interface”. This input is build around Xilinx chip that accepts PCM signal up to 32 bits and 192 kHz. You might remember our coverage of Cracow Sonic Society's meeting with Mr Raveen Bava, who presented a dCS Vivaldi digital system? If you don't remember (or never read it) I strongly encourage you to read it (see HERE). One of the most important elements of this four-box, 400.000 PLN system was an ultra-precise master clock. This solution is widely used in professional studios, where different devices have to be synchronized with a single master clock. All of them sport proper inputs and there are manufacturers who offer high quality external master clocks that can be used for this purpose. JVC followed the same approach in their K2 mastering system, and used K2 master clock for all elements of the system. The newest version of K2 system, for XRCD24, includes „Rubidium K2 Clock”. If you want to read more about K2 see HERE. Recording used during test (a selection):
I have no problem with stating that under certain circumstances the D/A converter under review might be the only one you'll ever need. It is not the best DAC I know, far from it actually. It is easy to discover all choices its designer made and then to assess them by yourself. What's more – it is also easy to tell what exactly one pays for sometimes even several times more money when buying top quality device of this kind. But still from the moment I started my sessions with HD-7A192 as well as when I finished them I was certain that this was a well thought through, finished design that required no tweaks, upgrades or whatsoever. I'll get back to that bit later but I want to make one thing very clear from the beginning – I assessed this DAC with K2 processor on. It wouldn't be fair to say that without it this DAC wasn't any good. K2 is not a magical trick, it is supposed to improve already very good input signal. You know what they say: sh.t in sh.t out no matter what you do with it in between. If you put sh.t in than all you can do is to „pack” it nicely but it still will be a nicely packed sh.t. So this DAC is a very good device but it is K2 that gives the sound the final touch, makes the sound more sophisticated, „noble” and it is K2 that allows me to say that for some people this might be the only DAC they'll ever need. Euphony in case of HD-7A192 is bit of a too strong word but I still would like to use it as it explains best the direction of thinking I'd like to invite you to chose here. Phasemation is capable of „extracting” from any recording some things that usually gets buried under many other more „significant” elements. The most important of them is the „air” that is always present during recording. It manifests its presence by a low level noise and by „ambiance”. And all the noise from microphones and tape becomes to make sense. One can hear them better, which some might interpret as a bad thing, noise is not a good thing, right? It is obvious that noise is an enemy of high quality sound. But the noise I'm talking about is an inseparable part of the signal that we have to reproduce at OUR side of the chain. So it has to be reproduced equally well as the rest of the signal. |
To be clear – I don't listen to noise, but it help me to establish some fundamental facts concerning system, particular device and/or recording. There is no emphasis on treble here. Japanese converter offers slightly rounded sound with a hint of natural warmth. That's a coloration, all right, but it is so small that it could easily be interpreted rather as sonic character than coloration. I could describe bass in a similar way. There is a lot of it if only particular recording allows it, it's colorful, tuneful, with a nice slam. But, same as the treble, it's a bit rounded. And, again the same as treble, it's extension could be a bit better as it isn't as good as presented by for example Ayon Audio Sigma that I reviewed recently for „EnjoyTheMusic.com. But I said it was a complete sound, right? Right, it is! As any audio device also this one has some limitations that have been composed into DAC's performance which in general voids these limitations. Everything one could hold against this DAC goes away because of its smoothness, richness and impressive resolution of low level signals. There is nothing in this sound that causes immediate „wow” effect, nothing demands listeners attention and yet when one starts to listen one dives deep into music and nothing else matters. Yes, I did start my listening sessions with XRCD and K2/K2HD discs from my collection. I concentrated on those that I got directly from Mr Kazuo Kiuchi, when he visited us in Cracow (see HERE). Mr Kiuchi's involvement, also financial one, in this system is well known, and you can find his name on many covers of XRCD24sstating his as a producer. That is I value so much discs with his personal inscription for me. But it's not really a point here> i started with these CDs and I got what I'd expected – some sort of „compatibility” between these discs and this DAC. Soon enough I found out that limiting my sessions to K2 CDs was not necessary. Everything I loved so much about this performance – amazing depth not only of the whole recording/soundstage but also of individual sounds – I found also while listening to non-K2 recordings. It worked even with such a poor (technically!) recordings like Mike Oldfield's Man On The Rocks, his newest album that I got in, hypothetically, best possible version - SHM-CD, straight from Japan. Even this version doesn't really help with brightness and compression. It might even make it worse to listen. But still, while played through Phasemation it sounded at least OK, with more precise, deeper, more „pleasant” images. And vocal wasn't so irritating any more. On the other hand with small masterpieces like Czesław Niemen and Akwarele's Czy mnie jeszcze pamiętasz new remaster prepared by Jacek Gawłowski (see more HERE) it sounded amazing, beautiful. There was this natural softness and amazing ability to differentiate timbre, great spacing and precise imaging. That's what Phasemation does so well! Summary Any ideas that are supposed to lead to improvement of a Red Book sound seem, in times of HD Audio, obsolete. Why would someone improve something that is a „closed system” while at the same time we have at our disposal a signal that offers much better parameters, that is there within grasp and that costs less? I respect such a view as it is based on solid theoretical base. It was nicely laid out by Mark Waldrep of “Real HD-Audio”: The article I read says that the XRCD process creates “precise pit lengths to eliminate time jitters”. There is no jitter associated with the position or length of the pits on a CD. The data is read by the optical laser from the pits (and lands) and re-clocked within any quality CD player. Basically, it’s a stream of words pulled from the pits and then sent out to the DACs in a tightly clocked sequence. The original rubidium clock is old news by then I’ve posted on this topic previously. The resolution of a Redbook CD cannot be “extended” by using better mastering methods or custom processing of any kind. There will always be 44.1 kHz samples and 16-bit words on a CD. The best that can be said about XRCDs is that they are among the best CDs ever replicated. But the quality of the source audio and the quality of the mastering process determine the overall sound of the final replicated CD much more than the “K2″ converters or XRCD label. This is another example of marketing over media. It's a reasonable, well laid out opinion. On paper it looks very well. But in reality, where this „paper” is verified by actual experience, at least in my opinion, it seems wrong. I'd say that if one decided to spend 35 USD for XRCD, it is money well spent, probably in the best possible (at least today) way. I've been buying CDs that were prepared in more advanced way than regular ones and audible differences between these and „regular” CDs are always somewhere between clearly noticeable and huge. So i definitely can't agree with those who claim that it doesn't matter how CD is done – that's simply not true. But it's been repeated so many times by many people that it became a „common knowledge”. Same can be said about audio devices: it does matter how a digital signal is processed and converted, it simply effects what we can hear. It might even be more important than one would think. Even though it seems to oppose „bit-to-bit” logic digital processors, like K2, when calculating bits read from a CD, do something they should not be able to do. If they are good enough, I mean. And K2 belongs among the best of them. Using it Phasemation designed a D/A Converter that offers a higher quality sound based on 16/44 signal from a CD than on HD signal delivered via USB input. The latter offers very good quality, sound is dynamic, tuneful, but it doesn't have resolution and density of what CD (played via high quality CD Transport) delivered. When I compared the two I thought that playing even HD audio files was still far from perfect. It's a beautifully sounding DAC. There is nothing about this device that could indicate it comes from Japan. It could as well be made in China. In fact nowadays many Japanese devices look like that. A solid design but not special about them. The back side of this device is pretty standard: RCA, USB and Toslink digital inputs, a pair of gold plated analogue outputs, a dedicated input for external master clock and a master clock output to connect it to CD Transport. There is also a IEC socket as Phasemation has w power supply integrated within the same casing. The mechanical design is pretty good, although there is nothing special about it. Except maybe for one element – there are three feet, one supporting the back of the device, and two supporting front. The front feet are fixed to the bottom of casing and than through decoupling rubber washers with a bakelite plate. On the other side of the same plate power transformers are fixed so all these elements seems to create a single „block” together. So in case one decides to use additional anti-vibration feet one should place them under feet, not just any place under the device. It might not look fancy but it is a solid design. It's built around quite advanced power supply section with 3 R-core transformer: two supply analogue section (right and left channel) and the third one powers digital stage. The latter has 5 separate secondary windings. Analogue section sports a rectifier based on Zener diodes. There are a lot of high quality capacitors. There are two, one per channel, Burr Brown PCM1974A DAC chips. The I/V conversion, analogue filters and output buffers are all based on transistors and not on integrated circuits. Manufacturer used high quality elements like metallised resistors, polypropylene capacitors, and purple Sanyo electrolyte capacitors that I've seen before a lot in many of the best digital devices. The digital section combines several DSP and CMOS circuits. USB input delivers signal to XMOS chip that is capable of decoding signal up to 24 bit/192 kHz and converting it to PCM I2S signal. Next this signal (also signals from other two digital inputs) is sent to Analog Devices AD9852ASTZ DSP circuit. It seems to be a digital receiver with PLL loop that also sports digital filters and upsampling feature. Next there is an inconspicuous JCV8009 chip – it's a D/D converter that changer 16 bit words into 20 bit ones by interpolating additional bits (not by adding empty ones). Only than signal goes finally to DAC chip but not directly only via optocouplers – optical isolators separating these two sections. An impressive design with lots of interesting ideas and good engineering involved. Technical specification (according to Manufacturer) Sampling frequency: Polish distributor |
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ANALOG SOURCES - Turntable: AVID HIFI Acutus SP [Custom Version] - Cartridges: Miyajima Laboratory KANSUI, review HERE | Miyajima Laboratory SHILABE, review HERE | Miyajima Laboratory ZERO (mono) | Denon DL-103SA, review HERE - Phono stage: RCM Audio Sensor Prelude IC, review HERE DIGITAL SOUCES - Compact Disc Player: Ancient Audio AIR V-edition, review HERE - Multiformat Player: Cambridge Audio Azur 752BD PREAMPLIFICATION - Line Preamplifier: Polaris III [Custom Version] + AC Regenerator, regular version review (in Polish) HERE AMPLIFICATION - Power amplifier: Soulution 710 - Integrated Amplifier: Leben CS300XS Custom Version, review HERE LOUDSPEAKERS - Stand mount Loudspeakers: Harbeth M40.1 Domestic, review HERE - Stands for Harbeths: Acoustic Revive Custom Series Loudspeaker Stands - Real-Sound Processor: SPEC RSP-101/GL HEADPHONES - Integrated Amplifier/Headphone amplifier: Leben CS300XS Custom Version, review HERE - Headphones: HIFIMAN HE-6, review HERE | HIFIMAN HE-500, review HERE | HIFIMAN HE-300, review HERE | Sennheiser HD800 | AKG K701, review (in Polish) HERE | Ultrasone PROLine 2500, Beyerdynamic DT-990 Pro, version 600 - reviews (in Polish): HERE, HERE, HERE - Headphone Stands: Klutz Design CanCans (x 3), review (in Polish) HERE - Headphone Cables: Entreq Konstantin 2010/Sennheiser HD800/HIFIMAN HE-500, review HERE CABLES System I - Interconnects: Acrolink Mexcel 7N-DA6300, review HERE | preamplifier-power amplifier: Acrolink 8N-A2080III Evo, review HERE - Loudspeaker Cables: Tara Labs Omega Onyx, review (in Polish) HERE System II - Interconnects: Acoustic Revive RCA-1.0PA | XLR-1.0PA II - Loudspeaker Cables: Acoustic Revive SPC-PA POWER System I - Power Cables: Acrolink Mexcel 7N-PC9300, all system, review HERE - Power Distributor: Acoustic Revive RTP-4eu Ultimate, review HERE - Power Line: fuse – power cable Oyaide Tunami Nigo (6m) – wall sockets 3 x Furutech FT-SWS (R) System II - Power Cables: Harmonix X-DC350M2R Improved-Version, review (in Polish) HERE | Oyaide GPX-R (x 4 ), review HERE - Power Distributor: Oyaide MTS-4e, review HERE COMPUTER AUDIO - Portable Player: HIFIMAN HM-801 - USB Cables: Acoustic Revive USB-1.0SP (1 m) | Acoustic Revive USB-5.0PL (5 m), review HERE - LAN Cables: Acoustic Revive LAN-1.0 PA (kable ) | RLI-1 (filtry), review HERE - Router: Liksys WAG320N - NAS: Synology DS410j/8 TB ANTIVIBRATION ACCESSORIES - Stolik: SolidBase IV Custom, read HERE/all system - Anti-vibration Platforms: Acoustic Revive RAF-48H, review HERE/digital sources | Pro Audio Bono [Custom Version]/headphone amplifier/integrated amplifier, review HERE | Acoustic Revive RST-38H/loudspeakers under review/stands for loudspeakers under review - Anti-vibration Feets: Franc Audio Accessories Ceramic Disc/ CD Player/Ayon Polaris II Power Supply /products under review, review HERE | Finite Elemente CeraPuc/ products under review, review HERE | Audio Replas OPT-30HG-SC/PL HR Quartz, review HERE - Anti-vibration accsories: Audio Replas CNS-7000SZ/power cable, review HERE - Quartz Isolators: Acoustic Revive RIQ-5010/CP-4 PURE PLEASURE - FM Radio: Tivoli Audio Model One |
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