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Audirvana plus mqa settinhs
Audirvana plus mqa settinhs





  1. #Audirvana plus mqa settinhs full
  2. #Audirvana plus mqa settinhs Bluetooth
  3. #Audirvana plus mqa settinhs plus

#Audirvana plus mqa settinhs plus

For example, when I play MConnect on my iPad through my USB DAC (Zorloo Ztella MQA version), it indicates that it is playing at only 44 kHz.ĪaronWow, been waiting for this info for more than a year, thank you so much, this clears all out, and for many others as well!!So i downloaded both Audirvana and Mconnect, looks very promising, but couple questions raised again, of course if i get a DAC i will be able to stream 24 192, but having the phantoms its own DAC plus what Audirvana does with software, do you really need an external DAC?Īnother question, using both apps, do you feel sound differences between them?Īnd last, do you feel big difference between streaming from tidal vs audirvana? They claim MQA decoding, but I'll confess I'm not convinced. MConnect simplifies the process by streaming and transporting the file via UPnP to the speaker itself. Their iOS app is a remote control for the Mac. The Mac transports the decoded stream at 92 kHz via UPnP to the reactor, which DAC's, amplifies, and creates the sound. I use Audirvana (requires a Mac or PC) to stream and decode the MQA.

  • WIRELESS: HiDef formats or up to 92 kHz MQA.
  • WIRED: 192 kHz data (rendered MQA or HiDef formats) from a DAC.
  • I don't know anything about DSD or over very high bitrate file formats, but I believe the Reactors can handle up to 192 kHz if you transport the files via wire or UPnP.
  • If you stream over wireless, as I do, you're limited to 92 kHz.

    #Audirvana plus mqa settinhs full

  • If you wire your DAC to the Reactors, you can get this full 192 kHz MQA data to them.
  • The Reactors CANNOT render MQA (they have an internal DAC though!) Rendering is typically done in hardware (like a MQA capable DAC) but I'm trying to confirm if apps like Audirvana can render as well. Tidal, MConnect, and Audirvana can decode (typically done in software). You need to decode (44 kHz -> 88 kHz or 48 kHz -> 96 kHz) and render (96 -> 192 kHz) - each step "unfolds" details in the music file. Apt-X (HD Bluetooth) is an option if you're not on iOS, but the Reactors don't support Apt-X.

    #Audirvana plus mqa settinhs Bluetooth

    Importantly, neither AirPlay nor vanilla Bluetooth can handle anything better than FLAC (44 kHz). If you have a wired connection to your Reactors, it isn't a problem. While the Tidal app works great, it can be a dead end for wireless, as it doesn't have UPnP built in. My take is that it is - but I'm enjoying the tinkering involved either way! There is a lot of debate as to whether MQA is worth the hassle. Tidal does FLAC for CD-quality (they call it "Hifi") and Master for MQA.

    audirvana plus mqa settinhs audirvana plus mqa settinhs

    Make sure the digital file is what you want.

    audirvana plus mqa settinhs

    No step in the process can add detail - they can limit it though. Original recording > Final Source Material > Digital File for Distribution > Regional Transmission (streaming, NAS, local file) > Decoding (MQA only) > Rendering (MQA only) > Local transmission ( Airplay, Bluetooth, UPnP) > Digi/Analog Conversion > Amplification > Wire connection to Speaker > Speaker Output. (0, 01:39)Juanbk Wrote: (0, 17:28)Charcharius Wrote: I'm no expert, and I have a lot to learn! I'm hesitant, as I'm sure I'll get corrected - but here is what I think I know.







    Audirvana plus mqa settinhs