Description

I set up this system for fun and convenience and I am astounded at how good it sounds!

I rip CD's to the MAC G4's hard drive, uncompressed, using AIFF. I use the computer's hard drive as a transport, feeding the digital signal to the Apogee DAC via the USB output from the MAC G4. The Apogee has balanced XLR analogue L & R outputs which I connect to the balanced XLR inputs on the Mackie HR824's. The Mackies are active, bi-amped. This system sounds incredibly good. There seems to be some synergy between these components and the active bi-amped Mackies eliminate the need for amplifiers or speaker cables reducing the signal path after the amplifiers to nothing, eliminating a set of interconnects while providing bi-amplification! I would recommend this system to anyone thinking of using his/her computer as a juke box. I've got this in a 16' X 20' room and it fills the space beautifully. It will end up in a much smaller room eventually. It sounds great up close or from futher away. If you can't tell, I am really pleased with the results. I would also recommend this instead of using a CD player -- this sounds better than $1,000 CD players I have heard (Yamaha s2300). I tried several other configurations, tried an M-Audio USB Audiphile DAC prior to the Apogee, but the Apogee is in a different league, several huge jumps in quality from the M-Audio. This is a seriously high quality DAC. And, I am amazed at these Mackies. These are used by a lot of recording studios because they are so accurate -- usually sold in pro-audio shops -- audiophiles need to become acquainted with Mackie!
Read more...

Components Toggle details

    • MAC G4 1.25 Ghz Laptop Transport
    Hard Drive
    • Apogee USB Mini-DAC
    Takes USB digital feed from computer, performs Digital to Analogue conversion.
    • Mackie HR824
    Active Bi-amped monitor speakers with flat response, +/- 1 db, from 37Hz to 22Khz.

Comments 11

Showing all comments by jackv4realty.

View all comments

I looked up the specs on the Mackey monitors, and I was shocked at how flat the frequency response was. If the graph is correct, it is probably the flattest frequency response graph I have ever seen. I am really tempted to go this way as well, Rsbeck.

Just so we can compare notes, what other speakers and systems are you familar with, and how would you compare the sound of these to the Mackeys?

jackv4realty