Enter the last year of major *beneficial* changes.
I first decided to give tube amplification a try. This was obvious since most people would use tubes along with higher sensitivity speakers. I couldn't go with flea power amps at 92dbm, but I could safely go with a 40 watt modified Dynaco. These classic units are rebuilt and the resulting amp can compete with much higher priced amps. My Dynaco ST-70 was found on the Klipsch forums, freshly modified by nosvalves.com with a driver board from tubes4hifi.com. These mods are reported to be among the absolute best. The resulting change was very pleasing after having taken a lot of the damping out of the room. Everything became much more listenable, but bass and treble extension seemed lacking. It also became apparent at this time that the CD player was a huge bottleneck in my system. When listening to the music I could hear the CD spinning in the player! Now this is VERY bad for the music because that noise and energy all gets amplified and confused with the musical signal that you want.
Hmm I forgot that my chosen DAC was the modified Art DI/O professional ADC unit. I modified this unit to output around 2V instead of the pro-level 9V so that it wouldn't overload the equip. This unit (with enough mods) is said to be a "giant killer," but I really don't believe in such a thing. It was a very nice DAC for the money after mods $100, and that's about it.
Decided to find a replacement for my CDP and DAC at the same time. I chose the Hawk Audio MP-DAC MkIII because of its review in comparison to the Audio Note DAC Zero and it's MASSIVE power supplies and regulation. The approach is simple: use common receiver and DAC with good old engineering and then follow that with an uncompromising solid-state output stage. The output is fully differential using discrete transistors and an op-amp ?in current sensing loop? Only printed circuit boards were purchased and I was left to source all of the parts except for the chipset. It took awhile to source all of the parts (and a lot of money), about $500 worth of parts. Turns out that the schematic and boards had a number of errors, even known and uncorrected errors, that I had to painfully work through. This DAC was completed before I received the new Audio Note transport. It was only a brief time that I played this DAC with the NAD CDP. It simply wasn't worth remembering its characteristics with such a dismal transport.
I loathed the NAD 521i before it was replaced. It barely escaped being thrown out the window a number of times. When you know that a component is really hurting your system it's pretty hard to have sympathy for it. I have no idea how it got such good reviews.
I took the Audio Note CDT-two because I was looking for a *transport* ie. a unit that only spits out bits and does not have any internal DAC. The AN was sent to me by an AA member who was upgrading to the CDT-two MkII. I was happy to take a $4500 transport off his hands for $1450 because it would nearly cost this much to DIY an implementation of the Phillips' renowned CD-Pro laser pickup. It's a simple concept, despite the AN smoke about Black Gate caps used and the AN "sound", it's a solid power supply driving one of the best laser units out there.
I worked very hard at this time to have my Lack-rack completed for when the AN transport arrived. The rack helped the sound in every possible way by a very noticeable margin.
Now with the Hawk Audio and Audio Note connected, I was listening to a completely different system. Right away I noticed that my DIY cables were making my system noisy, so I quickly replaced them with cables from Audio Art. This is a new company and I bought two 2-meter pairs of their copper IC's. These are shielded cables and cost me about $140. Now I could enjoy listening to a completely different animal.
The stereo now sounded very open with tons of detail. It's obvious that the speakers are *not* a short-fall of this system and they lend themselves to that intimate and detailed character. Digital harshness has been nearly eliminated, but the bass and treble still seem rolled-off.