•220V
•Made in USA
•24-bit/96kHz
•ราคาป้ายแดงเกือบสี่หมื่น
•ตัวนี้สวยเกือบ 100% เดิมๆไม่เคยโม
•แยกรายละเอียดของเครื่องดนตรีทุกชิ้นชัดเจน
•Burr-Brown 1728
•Dual 12AX7 tube discrete analog stage
•DAC design, with eight separately regulated power supplies
•The Crystal CD8414 low-jitter input receiver is present and input sampling frequency is specified at 28.4kHz to 96kHz with a frequency response of 5Hz to 40kHz (+/- 1dB). THD is rated less than 0.005%, output voltage is 2.0V rms, output impedance specified at 2k ohms, and channel separation in excess of 80dB. The Alpha DAC will not decode HDCD signals, though the HDCD indicator on the CL-20 when used as a transport will light
•The front panel of the Alpha DAC has push buttons for standby mode and input selection. The standby button brings the DAC back to life from its continual warmed-up mode, assuming the unit is plugged in and the main power is turned on from the rear panel. This allows the low-voltage supply to the two 12AX7 tubes to be dropped, while higher-voltage supplies to transformer and filter caps are maintained. Bottom line? Your tubes will live longer and you’ll avoid long warm-up periods. The Alpha has a one-minute mute cycle once the standby button is pushed, so don't go crazy trying to figure out what's wrong when you don't hear music from the starting gun
•The rear panel is all business, with an IEC receptacle for the supplied or your favorite detachable power cord, rocker-type power switch, and RCA analog L/R outputs. Input options are coaxial 75-ohm RCA, balanced 110-ohm XLR, AT&T glass and TosLink optical. The Alpha measures 8.5"W x 4.75"H x 12.5"D, and weighs in at 10 pounds. It’s no bigger than it needs to be, and quite easily placed in smaller spaces left in your rack