I also have had the same experiences with JRiver 22 and an Oppo 103 via HDMI.
I've spent what seems like 6 weeks jacking things around to get a dsf. multi-channel set of files to play correctly, and have gotten them to play, only to get up the next day and turn things on and it's gone again.
I have changed so many setting that now even 2-chan stereo is now silent. My Wasapi setting disappeared on my hardware selector, so that is a bad sign. I tried ASIO just as a fluke, and it stated no multi-channel playback with ASIO. Not sure how true that is, but am not getting any with it.
When I go into DSP setting with a file playing it will say 44.1khz with 64bits is not playable with your hardware. But the files are of course not 64bit. I have no idea how JRiver deduced that?
Even my original purchase seemed glitchy from the start. I got out my credit card to pay for JRiver, and it asked me to make sure that I was using the version that the purchased key was for "23". Yet I was on ver. 22 and saw no button or selector to switch over the key to ver. 22. I felt stuck with a key for next version but I paid anyway and the code sent to me took. Now I come to this forum and look for ver. 22 for Windows and it's not here either. Are you trying to quickly bury 22 for win?
I feel like I should remove the entire program from my computer and relaunch the installation fresh and start all over. The more work I did to get DSD M/C files to play the further away I got from a good stable installation for playing stereo files..
Is there a button for putting things back to default settings, or is a fresh installation the only way to get back to how things were when new?
I went and wound back Win 10 to it's original installation where nothing else was on the computer. I then reinstalled MC23. Thankfully my WASAPI driver selection reappeared and I selected it of course.
This is where I am now.
All stereo FLAC files play perfectly except 24/192 (24/192 gives error below)
Playback cannot be started using 192khz 24bit 2-ch.It offered up the conversion to 96khz 24bit for playback. Is it true JRiver does
not handle 24/192 audio files, or is this another issue I am to scale?
All multi-channel FLAC files play perfectly so long as they are not dsf files. I could have sworn that I was able to get dsf to pass through HDMI to my Oppo untouched by any resampling (DSP output settings) previously during experiments and changing other settings.
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And looking at the spec sheet for JRiver, it implies that DSD is supported in a bit-perfect way:
Bit PerfectJRiver Media Center audio is bit perfect. This means that it can output your CDs, your HD audio (88.1 KHz, 176 KHz, and more),
your DSD, and any other audio perfectly to your DAC.
OK, it never mentions 192khz, but it must be supported (right?), and DSD perfectly to your DAC seems to be a matter of opinion, and not fact if one wants bit-perfect as promised in the heading, correct?WAV & LosslessJRiver is a pioneer in lossless compression. Matt Ashland, JRiver's CTO, created Monkey's Audio (APE), one of the first lossless compression codecs. Media Center fully supports WAV, AIFF, FLAC, APE, WMA Lossless, Apple Lossless, and WavPack.
OK, here JRiver seems to back-track a tad, and does not claim DSD (or dsf) support, or not at the level that these seven other codecs are supported.DSDMedia Center can bitstream DSD to high-end DACs using ASIO 2.2.
You mean bitstream bit-perfect? Or the resampled down res type of bitstream?Please someone at least let me know if 192/24 can play bit-perfect through JRiver?