CHORD DAC 64MKII
Convertitore D/A
Codice: 66620517
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Convertitore D/A
Chord is introducing a number of new digital products using advanced
technology features. Chord Electronics is the first company in the World
to use this exciting new technology, which provides groundbreaking
performance. The DAC64 is the first model to be introduced with this
technology and features a radically new type of filter called the Watts
Transient Aligned filter (WTA); improved fourth generation Pulse Array
DAC; 64 bit filter and DAC architecture; and a new all digital DAC
receiver chip.
WTA Filter
The WTA filter algorithm has taken
twenty years of research to develop. It solves the question as to why
higher sampling rates sound better. It is well known that 96 kHz (DVD
Audio) recordings sound better than 44.1 kHz (CD) recordings. Most
people believe that this is due to the presence of ultrasonic
information being audible even though the best human hearing is limited
to 20kHz. What is not well known is that 768 kHz recordings sound better
than 384 kHz and that the sound quality limit for sampling lies in the
MHz region. 768 kHz recordings cannot sound better because of
information above 200 kHz being important – simply because musical
instruments, microphones, amplifiers and loudspeakers do not work at
these frequencies nor can we hear them. So if it is not the extra
bandwidth that is important, why do higher sampling rates sound better?
The
answer is not being able to hear inaudible supersonic information, but
the ability to hear the timing of transients more clearly. It has long
been known that the human ear and brain can detect differences in the
phase of sound between the ears to the order of microseconds. This
timing difference between the ears is used for localising high frequency
sound. Since transients can be detected down to microseconds, the
recording system needs to be able to resolve timing of one microsecond. A
sampling rate of 1 MHz is needed to achieve this!
However, 44.1
kHz sampling can be capable of accurately resolving transients by the
use of digital filtering. Digital filtering can go some way towards
improving resolution without the need for higher sampling rates. However
in order to do this the filters need to have infinite long tap lengths.
Currently all reconstruction filters have relatively short tap lengths –
the largest commercial device is only about 256 taps. It is due to this
short tap length and the filter algorithm employed that generates the
transient timing errors. These errors turned out to be very audible.
Going from 256 taps to 1024 taps gave a massive improvement in sound
quality – much smoother, more focused sound quality, with an incredibly
deep and precise sound stage.
The initial experiments used
variations on existing filter algorithms. Going from 1024 taps to 2048
taps gave a very big improvement in sound quality, and it was implying
that almost infinite tap length filters were needed for the ultimate
sound quality. At this stage, a new type of algorithm was developed –
the WTA filter. This was designed to minimise transient timing errors
from the outset, thereby reducing the need for extremely long tap
lengths. The WTA algorithm was a success – a 256 tap WTA filter sounded
better than all other conventional filters, even with 1024 taps. WTA
filters still benefit from long tap lengths; there is a large difference
going from 256 taps to 1024 taps.
The new Chord products using WTA
filters all start with 1024 taps. The filters are implemented in FPGAs
(Field Programmable Gate Arrays) using a specially designed 64-bit DSP
(Digital Signal Processing) core.
Fourth Generation Pulse Array DAC
Pulse
Array as a DAC technology has been universally praised for its
outstanding natural sound quality. The fourth generation builds on this
success; it employs 64 bit, 7th order noise shaping; 2048 times
oversampling rates and improved pulse width modulated elements. These
refinements give much better measured performance; better detail
resolution with a smoother more focused sound quality.
64 Bit DAC and Filter
All
filters generate higher output bit data widths – for example 16-bit
input multiplied by 16-bit coefficient generates a 32-bit output. All
conventional filters truncate the output by discarding bits – however,
this discarding may lose information. By using a 64-bit filter and DAC
architecture, there is no possibility of degrading the sound quality.
64-bit architecture becomes a very big advantage when digital volume
controls are used as no loss of detail or degradation is possible.
Digital Receiver Chip
The
receiver chip takes the SPDIF or AES/EBU data and generates clocks and
data in a form that the filter can accept. The new chip has two major
benefits – all digital data extraction and a RAM buffer (a RAM buffer
sequentially takes in all the data, re-times, it then sends it out). The
all-digital extraction is error tolerant – it can accept multiple
edges, which often happens in noisy environments, without generating
errors. The RAM buffer allows a jitter free local clock operation
without needing to send back a clock signal to the data source.
All
of the above innovations are implemented in Xilinx Virtex series FPGA’s.
These FPGA’s offer 200,000 gates per device, and merely updating the
EPROM memory chip can easily change the design, thus future proofing is
assured.