Young Reviews

Aug 11 2011

A couple of years ago, almost no DAC was capable of playing high-resolution computer audio files through a USB input. Today, a good selection of them can, and the M2Tech Young is a worthy entry at its price. Unlike most of its competition, it can play up to 32-bit/384kHz files, which should future-proof its design...Of more interest to me was how the Young sounded playing the computer audio files available today: rips of CDs and hi-rez downloads. With those, it sounded delightful, with a smooth response, beautiful tonal reproduction, and lots of detail...Highly recommended. 
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Aug 09 2011

This isn't the first 384kHz DAC, though it's the first affordable one. It won't be the last, either. But kudos to M2Tech for doing it and huge respect and admiration for doing it so well.
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Jul 05 2011

...reminded me of the best D/A conversion I've had in my system, the TEAC Esoteric P-05, D-05 transport and converter...Compared to my Oppo BD-95 unit, my Integra 9.8 pre-pro, home theater computer, and Toshiba HD-DVD player, this unit skunks them all...I could also hear no significant difference between the USB and S/PDIF input over the test period confirming the remarkable jitter reduction ability of the unit...for its US$1799 list price it is a steal! I just wonder what their Vaughan unit can do better at its higher price point.
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M2Tech Reviews

User Review of Vaughan

It was stunningly MUSICAL! And the bass foundation in the music was a revelation – I had no idea of how much of the bottom end had been missing before. And it was not bloated bass with undue resonance, it was clean and articulate. And that is the second description to highlight – ARTICULATE...
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Enjoy The Music HiFace Review

I purchased three of the hiFace devices for my personal use...The curious reader might ask, why three of them? Easy, one for my dedicated system, one for work and one to hack, but that's another story...
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