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PS AUDIO - PWD BLACK DACThis Item is a Demo New Reference Outboard DAC Sounds as Good as it Looks! Mates with PS Audio's PerfectWave Transport or Any Other Brand - The PerfectWave DAC is Built in Boulder, Colorado! Expected to ship in May of 2009, this reference-level outboard DAC was designed to work with the PS Audio Perfect Wave Transport, but can absolutely be used with any source. The UltraLink sets a new standard for DACs at any price. This piece of hardware not only looks gorgeous, its one of the most “analog-like” in its sonic signature. Paired with the PS Audio PWT (click here), this combination sounded like a digital system for ten times the cost! The DAC will decode almost any sampling rate and offers many different up-sampling options, although it seems to sound best at standard 16bit/44.1kHz through an I2S cable connected with the PWT. Eventually, you will be able to add matching hard-drive storage boxes in matching chassis, making this DAC and transport the hub for one of the most ambitious music server systems ever developed by an audiophile manufacturer. The PerfectWave DAC will change the way you think about Digital to Analog Converters forever. Features: Benefits: The groundbreaking PerfectWave Digital to Analog Converter (PWD) is a remarkable product. The PWD is the first high-end product to fully transcend the limitations of traditional Digital to Analog Converters (DACs) by providing uncompromised performance for any media delivery or storage system possible. This means that it no longer matters how the digital audio data is stored or delivered, the PWD produces the same high performance audio sent over a network, taken from a hard drive, a CD or even downloaded via the Internet. The PWD is a complete solution that can be used in a multitude of ways. As a standalone DAC, the PWD will accept inputs from any digitally connected source such as the Wadia iTransport, a CD player, CD transport, satellite receiver, music server or computer. As a preamplifier control center, the PWD connects directly to your power amplifier controlling both the volume and any of the seven (possible) connected sources. If you are not interested in playing optical discs (CD’s or DVD’s) directly, the PWD a network connection and a power amplifier are all you need for a complete high-end music system the likes of which have never been available in one affordable, easy to use, high-end product. Full Color Touch Screen As a Music Server (with the optional network Bridge installed), the touch screen becomes an indispensible tool that allows you to scroll through your connected music library, tune Internet radio stations, see cover art and song titles of what is playing at the moment and perform any network setup tasks that may be required. 7 Digital Inputs The most unique and valuable inputs on the PWD are the HDMI and the network Bridge. The remaining digital inputs are standard types that connect compatible equipment and accept up to 32 bit/192kHz digital audio signals. The HDMI inputs are designed not for accepting HDMI data, but instead are utilized in a unique PS designed standard for I2S data. I2S data is the native data management system within every transport, CD player and DAC. It consists of three separate clocks and one digital audio data line. The PWD’s unique I2S over HDMI delivers breathtaking audio results. Openness and clarity like you’ve never experienced in your digital audio system; ever. The PWD as a Music Server Music Storage The PWD system is built around the external remotely located hard drive. This is by far the best solution because it allows PWD owners to choose from hundreds of available options and sizes and allows for unlimited future expansion of the library. The average 2 or 3 thousand CD collection can be stored on 1 to 2 terabytes of data with no loss of quality. With the many available external hard drive options, a 2 terabyte drive can be purchased for $300 and those prices a dropping rapidly. These high quality drives are available all over the world and with PS Audio’s intuitive plug-and-play architecture, installing the drive couldn’t be easier. Connect any DLNA compatible NAS (there are many to choose from) to your home network, copy your music to the NAS and you are done. The PWD will find the NAS anywhere in your home, or even a thousand miles away, and you are ready to play. Instead of a fixed volume hard drive installed into a piece of equipment in your listening room, the PS system offers you the ultimate freedom and flexibility that only a network attached storage device can offer. The NAS can be stored away from the listening room, added to at any time, has no size restrictions, easy to backup and easy to share with your friends. Accessing the stored music is the job of the PS Bridge. The Network Bridge The communication portal allows the bridge to communicate with devices on your local network or on a remotely located device or service through the Internet. If your home has DLNA compatible storage or media devices on the network, the Bridge discovers them automatically and makes them available through the front panel touch screen or our upcoming iPod and iPhone wireless remote control application (you can see this in action in our video). If you are interested in Internet services such as Internet Radio or perhaps another media library at your office or second home, the bridge can find these as well and give you instant access. Once the communication path has been established the Bridge can accept almost any format of music storage such as FLAC, MP3, AIFF, Windows media, WAV etc. and convert them into the format best suited for the PWD. This conversion takes place through the Bridge’s powerful onboard processor and once completed, the raw musical data is sent to the internal Digital Lens. The Built in Digital Lens The built in Lens on the bridge gets it right. A Digital Lens is a device that takes any quality of digital audio data and focuses it to a single, perfect point of data. The Lens does this with the use of a very large digital storage tank (memory) coupled with a jitter free set of asynchronous (disconnected) clocks to output data to the Lens in perfect I2S format. This means that regardless of how the musical data is sent, via the internet, the network or through the PerfectWave Transport from a CD or DVD, the quality of the data reaching the PWD is the same. Finally, a system that does not care how the data is sent or stored has arrived as the world’s finest sounding music server ever built. The net result of these technological marvels is something to behold. The beautiful full color touch screen on the PWD gives you a great user interface. The Bridge handles data from any storage device you own or accesses music from anywhere in the world, and the internal D to A processor of the PWD converts that digital data into analog music that is warm, natural and musically satisfying beyond your expectations. Front Panel Accessible Features Sample Rate Converter It is technically possible to raise any sample rate and bit rate to a higher level through the use of a sample rate converter (SRC). These devices are amazing number crunching mathematic marvels that have been used since the beginning of the CD. They perform their magic by what is known as data manipulation. Their principal value is to reduce jitter, increase bit depth and sample rate so subsequent digital filters can sound better. The PWD has one of the most sophisticate SRC’s made providing 6 choices of sample rate improvement through the front panel touch screen. They have included this sophisticated SRC for two reasons: it is expected and in some cases, beneficial. Also, they have included a way to defeat the SRC. This may all sound very strange as we have become used to the idea that “more is better”. If 44.1 kHz is good, then surely 88.2 kHz is better and 192 kHz is the best. In some cases this is true but if you have a chance to audition the PWD and spend some time with this marvel you may discover that the ability to bypass the SRC is perhaps better in many cases. SRC’s manipulate data to do their work. DAC designers of nearly every company, including PS Audio, use them to lower incoming jitter and add features to the front panel. But years of research and a lot of engineering have demonstrated to us that while effective, use of the SRC can be a mixed bag. Native Mode We labeled the SRC bypass as “Native Mode” because it allows you to bypass completely the SRC’s data manipulation and listen to the raw data as it is sent natively from the source. In most cases, Native Mode sounds far superior to any of the SRC choices, including 24 bit 192 kHz. This is a stunning advancement in DAC technology that the implementation of the internal D to A processor on the PWD is good enough to permit the native 44.1 kHz 16 bit to outperform the upsampled 24 bit 192 kHz from the SRC. This feature is easily audible. For example, when using either the Bridge or the HDMI I2S inputs on the PWD there is no jitter to eliminate and so there is no technical need to use the SRC. Running the data through the SRC is sonically inferior to bypassing the SRC and it is an easy and demonstrable test to make. Simply switch between native and 44.1kHz to see. Or go the other way and switch between Native mode and 192 kHz. The SRC is a valuable feature when the source you are using is of rather low digital quality such as that from an Apple TV, low cost CD player, Squeezebox, Sonos or third party network enabled system. The PWD offers great flexibility for any source attached and once you hear a high quality source played through our exclusive Native Mode, you won’t ever consider going back to a DAC with a SRC in its path. Digital Filters All filters are “double edge swords” meaning they have both good and bad traits. The good is that they eliminate unwanted noise and digital artifacts that would wreak havoc on the music were they to remain. The bad includes the damage they add to the music when they perform their functions which include phase shift, ringing and pre-echo. To understand the complex world of filters we’ll need to take a brief journey back in time to the beginning of the CD player and DAC. In the early days of CD players and DACS digital filters were in their infancy. These filters were extremely steep “Brickwall” style filters which means they kept the audio portion untouched and removed everything above the audio very rapidly. These filters were so technically sophisticated that up until a year or two ago they have all been essentially the same for the last 25 years. Unfortunately, these filters have a dark side and that side of them contributes to an unnatural presentation of the music that is often referred to as the “digital sound”. Audiophiles have known that “digital sounds digital” and while progress has been made, rarely has any digital audio system approached the musically natural performance of the best analog setups. This class of filters is partly to blame. Known as Linear Phase Filters their strongest attribute are, as their name implies, the lack of phase shift in the audio band. A phase shift mess with harmonic overtones in a time related sense and contributes to an unnatural presentation of the instruments. These Linear Phase Filters solve that problem but add another: pre-ringing (sometimes referred to as pre-echo). Imagine an echo occurring before a musical note rather than after the note. This is the effect of pre-ringing and it is extremely unnatural. In fact, we understand now that this induced echo is more damaging than even a little phase shift. Minimum Phase and Apodizing filters So natural are these filters that they just had to be added to the PWD. On the front panel touch screen of the PWD we have made available 5 separate filter choices and among those choices are several Minimum Phase Apodizing filters along with several Linear Phase filters. We offer these filter choices because our experience has shown that different digital sources sound better with different digital filters. The PWD will actually memorize each of the filter choices for each of the inputs so when you choose your favorite filter it will always come up to optimize the particular input you have selected. The 5 filters available on the PWD are: 1. Linear phase ‘soft knee filter’ Polarity Inversion It is common knowledge that sources and music have seemingly no standard for absolute polarity. This fact is easily demonstrated by switching polarities on the PWD as the music plays. Many Audiophiles mark their discs in phase and out of phase and are very careful to select the proper phase before playing each disc. Some CD players and sources themselves invert phase so that a disc you believe is inverted actually is correct played on a specific device and incorrect on yet another. To fix this problem you can assign each input on the PWD to switch to the proper polarity when you activate that input. Inside the PWD itself The heart of the PWD is a Wolfson WM8741 stereo differential DAC, one of the latest generations of high-end DACS in the world. The extraordinary low order modulator and multi-bit DAC architecture found in the WM8742 achieves low out-of-band noise and world-class linearity for outstanding sound quality. The DAC displays characteristics typically associated only with extraordinarily expensive high end audio products including group delay, phase and latency, impulse response and transition band roll off. These features significantly reduce pre-ringing and give maximum insensitivity to clock jitter. PS Audio’s move to the Wolfson family of DACs is a major shift for the company. Formerly, in award winning products like the DLIII DAC, PS Audio engineering featured the Texas Instruments’ family of multi-bit DACs. The shift to Wolfson is a result of hundreds of hours of listening and evaluating in the sound room and the Wolfson family, the first of a new generation of DACs, trounced the TI parts which are the last of TI’s older technology. Parts Quality In the analog section of the PWD they went all out and spared nothing. First we eliminated all the surface mount parts in the signal path. Years of listening have confirmed for us the surface mount capacitors and resistors sound inferior to the best “through hole” passives. In our more affordable products surface mount parts help keep costs down and sound great. But when it comes to the PW series we were unwilling to budge even a little. Every component is hand chosen. Resistors are the best in the world PRP PR9372 audio resistors. Power supply capacitors are hand selected Nichicon and Panasonic low ESR types. The audio path is, of course, completely direct coupled from input to output but there are a few audio capacitors needed in ancillary positions and here we chose the highly regarded Nichicon Muse Audio caps. In the ever important analog power supply, large transformers handled by discrete Jung regulators proliferate the analog circuit board. Because the PWD is a no-holds-barred high-end DAC we made sure there were absolutely no integrated circuits or op amps of any kind in the signal path. None. Every component is a discrete proprietary audio design developed and refined over the last 35 years of audio design expertise and experience. Outside the PWD When you receive your PWD, you’ll find a pair of soft white gloves to pull the unit out of its protective cotton sleeve and unveil its beauty. Every person who has had the opportunity to see a PerfectWave in person has the same initial reaction: they reach out and softly caress it’s finish and admire its beautiful lines. Built in Boulder This is one gorgeous piece of equipment and just the beginning of the most beautiful natural sounding audio equipment you have ever had the privilege to own.
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