All my music is in flac and Wav formats. I use McIntosh MX121 to play it, using HDMI from computer to MX 121. Computer has a built-in AMD Radeon™ HD 6450A 512MB audio/video card capable of 24/192 bit rate. I called McIntosh to find the kind of DAC McIntosh 121 has in it. They sent me following information
The DAC is the AKM brand, AK4358
Questions
1) Why bit rate for .wav and .FLAC is missing from the above table?
2) By looking at the above information, can someone please advise me which format is the best to use with my MX 121?
3) I purchased several CD’s from HD-Tracks which are of 24/192 bit Rate in .wav format, should I convert them different format?
4) Does it up-sample all the music, as any other DACs will do?
5) Should I use DLNA via Ethernet instead of HDMI?
Thanks
trncs,
I also have a MX121 and have done some amount on research. Here are my suggestions:
1) Drop DLNA. It's an aweful protocol and interoperability isn't great between devices which are all supposed to be certified. I know that MC has done a lot of work on this but it is he the mercy of the other vendors...
2) FLAC is the best (or ALAC or AIFF). Any LOSSLESS format will give you the best audio quality (same as CD)
3) For quality, simplicity, and ease of use, I have switched to playing all my music using a Sonos Controller. With the iPhone/iPad interface, it is absolutely awesome. The Sonos connects to the MX121 using an optical (TOSLINK) cable so all decoding takes places in the MX121. The Sonos merely streams the data over and does a great job at it. The Sonos will play most formats except the 96k/24b and 192k/24b but see the next item before going too far with this type of content.
3) In terms of HDTracks and any 96k/24b or 192k/24b content, I suggest you read the following articles. I am an audio nut and I'm not wasting my time with it:
http://people.xiph.org/~xiphmont/demo/neil-young.html http://kenrockwell.com/audio/why-cds-sound-great.htm You can take your 192k/24b content and convert it to 44k/16b lossless.
4) If you really want to step it up a bit, you could a an external DAC such as a Cambridge MacMagic Plus. This particular unit has XLR Balanced Outputs which you can plug into the AUX 1 input.
5) Not sure of using HDMI to transport audio. Usually digital interconnect is done with Optical or Coaxial S/P DIF cables...
I have the following equipment and it sounds amazing:
McIntosh MX121, MC205, MR88
B&W Diamond 803s, CM Centre, PM1s
Denon DBP-2010CI
Popcorn Hour PCH-C200
Sonos Controller
Monster Power HTS 5100 MkII
If you have any questions about the MX121, let me know.