Thanks for your reply and advice. Quite understood, I do have a 11th gen Intel NUC that just gets the 8x DSD done, so yes, Intel should probably be the way to go currently. I just like a challenge, and when you think there are ARM cpu's that run the fastest of today's cell phones I am keeping an eye on whether the hobby type SBC will be getting any of those X1-X3 type cores, then I imagine 8X is not out of reach. But of course I do not know for certain. Its the single thread performance that determines the upconversion capability.
I am tinkering....the Rock Pi 3A (earlier rockchip chip, RX3568) does not do as well as RK3588 (PCM upconvert to 352.8K/384k....still produces great sound, so its really just satisfying my hobby interest rather than I am dissatisfied with the sound. I wonder what chip the Raspberry 5 will have in the end ?
I think it's going to be a bit of a stretch to see Hobby SBCs getting these ARM chips any time soon. The rockchip stuff is lightyears ahead of the Pi hardware wise but the drivers still leave a little to desire.
Raspberry is taking a 'year off' aren't they? So 2024 is when 5 probably goes into production.
My logic for using ARM SBCs less was that I could either get by with a lighter SBC / SOC (hell ESP32s are pretty impressive) or with inflation and supply issues on the ARM SBC side, a significantly more powerful x86 board for frankly, not a huge premium. I think the Pis have been really misappropriated by hobbyists, I get it because, I'm guilty of it too. They're linux, they're easy, there's excellent community support, etc. All of it makes it very attractive but I'm often seeing them employed for projects where you could EASILY get by with an ESP32. Between that and x86 essentially 'just working' (no worrying about whether the random SBC with excellent specs, will actually get usable graphics acceleration under linux for example), I've definitely reshaped my view on when I implement these capable ARM SBCs.
The J4125 and N5105 are 2 intel based chips that frequently show up in boards and mini PCs for *really* cheap. They're actually super capable. I have like 8 of them scattered around for stuff (the # ballooned thanks to an Amazon pricing error)
My main Dante / AoIP endpoint for my surround rig is an N5105 and the AES67 endpoint that handles headphones at my desk is a J4125. The desk one does some quasi heavy multichannel to stereo DSP and is pretty competent for being a cheap chip.
Oh speaking of AoIP, finding SBCs with NICs that support PTPv2 is a PITA (god thats a mouthful of acronyms) whereas, on the x86 side I've had great luck using ones designed as 'mini routers'. For ARM, the 1 that comes to mind is the CM4 actually.