Who is right? I was thinking about picking up a high-quality D-A converter and using it in conjunction with my RCA CD player.
Sam L
A high-end D-A converter like that included in the Apogee Rosetta 200 will do a better job than the converters in a domestic CD player.
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Editor In Chief Paul White replies: Using better converters on a cheapo CD player should improve the sound quality as you are bypassing the converters in the CD player. Digital outputs don't have digital-to-analogue converters in line with them by definition.
The big 'however' is that the CD player may have a poor transport that generates a high error rate and there may also be significant levels of clock jitter, which will degrade the signal, specifically affecting the noise floor and stereo imaging. Nevertheless, I'd be very surprised if the better converters didn't bring about some improvement.
Being practical, however, unless you already have the converters or are buying them primarily for some other purpose, it probably isn't worth buying anything too fancy to hang on the end of an indifferent CD player. A pragmatically chosen mid-price converter might sound just as good, or you could consider a professional-grade CD player or player/recorder.![]()