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Why do two DACs with identical specification sheets sound noticeably different?

The answer sits inside a small, unglamorous chip: the digital-to-analog converter.

Every digital recording — a streamed track, a CD, a hi-res file — exists as a string of numbers. Before that data can move a speaker cone or a headphone driver, it has to become a continuous, fluctuating voltage. That conversion isn’t a formality. It’s where timing errors (jitter), rounding artefacts, and noise are either suppressed or permanently baked into the sound.

This is a decades-old engineering problem. Early 1980s CD players used simple resistor-ladder conversion, prone to measurable distortion. Delta-sigma and oversampling designs improved accuracy through the 1990s and 2000s, and today’s most respected converters push further still.

Chord Electronics builds its own FPGA-based digital filters in-house rather than using off-the-shelf conversion chips — an approach that runs from the pocket-sized Mojo 2 up to the reference-grade DAVE.

Cary Audio takes a different route, pairing conversion stages with tube or hybrid output circuits for a warmer analogue character.

Increasingly, conversion and network streaming are merging into one box: Gold Note’s DS series (DS-10 EVO, DS-1000 EVO, DS-5.2) builds a network streamer directly around its DAC stage, so a single Italian-made unit replaces both a separate transport and converter. If that’s the direction you’re heading, our Streaming DAC range covers it in depth.

A good DAC doesn’t add anything to a recording — its job is to remove as little as possible. Below, you’ll find portable headphone DACs, desktop converters, and reference-level upscalers, so you can match the converter to your system rather than the other way around.

Powerful upgrade with Gold Note PSX-5.2 external PSU

Gold Note PSX-5.2, a new external power supply for Gold Note's 5.2 range of audio electronics unveiled. The unit is pictured placed on a marble column and draped in golden exquisite cloth

The benefits of adding an external PSU have been exploited in the hi-fi industry for decades since this is an extremely effective though simple way to upgrade an existing component. The usual (and best) practice is that the manufacturer provides all necessary hardware for such an addition and also produces the external power supply dedicated specifically for selected devices.

New Gold Note PSX-5.2 is a modular part of the new 5.2 series ecosystem, perfectly fitting for each compatible device which currently include CD-5.2 disc player, PH-5.2 phono preamp and HP-5.2 headphone amp.

By providing unrestricted current and stable voltage supply to the audio circuits within Gold Note 5.2 series components the new PSX-5.2 will bring immediate sonic improvement and offers clear step forward for buyers of these compact stereo units.

Written by Sergei Taranov

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