J&K Audio Design DAC Review - submitted by customer.
OCTOdac:
Fidelity and Musicality Beyond Sound.
Two years in the making, from design to sourcing and subsequently
the final built, the entire journey was a huge learning curve and also one
filled with utmost satisfaction. Credits to J&K for bearing and taking the
journey with me.
Listening: Round One - First Impression
It was flat and dull!... Seriously! With all the additional caps in
the DAC unit, it does sound like a punctured tyre trying hard to complete the
journey while waiting to be inflated back in shape. Not forgetting the tubes
were NOS dating back to the 30s and 40s.
Well, that was the first impression. It did not take long for the DAC to
gradually open up and reveal herself. After warming up probably for about 2
hours, the character of design became more apparent. Clean, dark, transient,
deep, wide and warm. If I were to put them into simple words, that would be it.
Sonically, if there’s such words it would be musical
neutral yet analoguely warm. Why I didn’t mention accuracy? That in my
humble opinion is subjective to the overall setup, room acoustic and head
knowledge of the audiophile. One man’s meat, may be another’s poison. A Concert
Grand Piano will definitely sound different from a Full Upright Piano… let’s
not go down that dark dark alley of audio apocalypse. For mention’s sake…. The
design and backbone of this DAC is capable of processing the difference.
Everything falls back on the listener.
Listening: Round Two – Width and Depth
Fast forward one week later, after daily non-stop playback of 10 –
12 hours, the full blossom of the DAC is at full bloom. Sonic control was just
enough, not like the army general howling battle cries, but enough to keep the
darling at arm’s length. Stage depth and width was and still is, beyond walls. Keeping things in
perspective, the speaker fades and the band / orchestra / ensemble takes center
stage. Dynamics were fast and attacks were strong yet gentle to the ear. Guitar
rifts up and down the frets keeps the listener on the edge of our toes,
anticipating the next bar or expressive fingerpicking. Attacks of the Flamenco
accompanied by the shoe taps of the tap dancer reverbs across the room.
Listening: Round Three – Instrumentals
Electronic sounds like techno and new age were less defined as this
DAC was designed with NOS in mind. Old School sound with a touch of new
component technology. The thumb of the techno bass and electronic drum were
less engaging. Head bangers will find this very upsetting. Though it raises
some hair, it doesn’t thump the heart to a point of cardiac arrest. Moving down
the spectrum, Rock, Soul, R&B audiophiles will not find any lacking in
this. The depth of the bass, tightness of the drum skin and mood of the R&B
and Soul are felt across the spectrum. Nothing is short changed during
playback. Going further down the stream to acoustic instruments is where this
DAC shines! Though only decoding at 20-bits, no details are spared. Starting
with the Quattro bass, each slap, slide, pop, bend and vibrato is clearly
audible. Brass instruments are bright and zingy. Woodwind blows mellow and
sweet. Strings are majestic and swift, each pull of the bow is well defined and
expressive. It truly takes a lot out from a DAC to realistically reproduce the
sound of a live quartet or orchestra performing in front of the listener. I
would say OCTOdac holds up pretty well. Of course system matching and room
acoustic also comes into play and both are equally important.
Listening – Round Four (Vocals)
The separation job done by the DAC was superb! Be it in a choir,
solo or acapella, the vocals are spot on. Emotions are positively passed on to
the listener. Vocal expressions are represented in a way that will keep you
anticipating on what will come next. Layers of sound are clearly defined.
Vocals lean toward the neutral side. Not excessively warm, neither is it
freezing cold. Dim the lights, sit back and crank up the volume. Indeed a
hair-raising experience, bordering the fine line of being horrifically silent.
Probably Chucky lurking round the corner of the room.
Design
The OCTOdac was fully custom designed with flexibility and future
upgrades in mind. The Processing (DAC) Module is truly modular and hot
swappable. In the event I would like to have a more vocal centric sound, I can
simply build another DAC and swap with my current PCM1702. Satisfying my
incurable itch for symmetry, the GainStage was build and design to match my
current monobloc amplifier.
DAC configuration &
description
Processing (DAC) Stage
Inputs: Fully dedicated S/PDIF and Digital Coaxial.
Output: Single-ended (RCA) analogue outputs.
Convertor: Dual Mono BurrBrown PCM1702 20-bit
Digital Power Trans: EI - Z11
(Level 2)
Analogue Power Trans: Super Hi-B Dual Core (Level 3)
Gain Stage (monobloc units)
Tube Compliments: 6J5 (driver) , RGN1064 / #1805 (rectifier).
Super Hi-B Dual Core Tube B+ Power Supply
Tube Output Trans: Western Electric Core 15K – 600
Conclusion
The OCTOdac filled the missing piece in my audiophile quest. Truly a
bang for buck, value for money and fully customized piece of gem. It doesn’t
just bring you music, it carries along with it the joy and emotions of sound.
Adequately defining the true meaning of Fidelity
and Musicality Beyond Sound.