hahaha... very koo... tp4 r jellyShow Image(http://emoticoner.com/files/emoticons/onion-head/bled1-onion-head-emoticon.gif?1292862492)
hahaha... very koo... tp4 r jellyShow Image(http://emoticoner.com/files/emoticons/onion-head/bled1-onion-head-emoticon.gif?1292862492)
Make one yourself then! =D
Haha.
hows the sound.. does it need an amp for something like earbud.The sound is amazing! It's a 24-bit 192KHz DAC so it can deliver very good sound.
hows the sound.. does it need an amp for something like earbud.The sound is amazing! It's a 24-bit 192KHz DAC so it can deliver very good sound.
I don't think you would need an amplifier for earbuds, but I would really reccomend to use it with a good amplifier + some headphones/speakers.
I run the audio from the RPi to a Schiit Sys, then to a Doxa Model 74 and then to some Bower & Wilkins 684.
Whoa, this looks awesome. So instead of plugging in your cans into your computer, you plug it into this music player and you can listen to your music wherever?Yes, this can stream from a NAS or a computer with cifs/nfs.
nice price on that DAC, I think the last rpi dac I saw was like $200 more than it should have been.Sounds a little flat and and "colorless" compared to more expensive DAC's, but it's not bad for the prize /size at all!
Did you 3D print that case or get it from somewhere pre-made?It's a Multicomp premade case, the reason it fit so well was becuase I cut away some supports inside (not documented). And since I removed the 1/8" (3,5mm) jack and the RCA video connector from the RPi itself, I could mount it in the case there. I had to use a file to get the 1/8" hole bigger because I needed to fit a RCA plug there. The hole for tha RCA plug that was there originally was a perfect fit though.
Wow, I was just looking at sourcing those RCA jacks and they cost more than the DAC!