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SOUNDSTAGE!
The DH Labs D-110 AES/EBU Cable
Silver for your Gold
I love bargains--you know, those things in life that deliver pleasure
that's far greater than the time and effort it takes to get them. The Internet
qualifies as a bargain, and so does the N(ational) F(ootball) L(eague)--which,
like music, is not always more involving in person (dopey announcers
aside). Although, in my opinion, there are components that wouldn't be
bargains if given away, for the most part, high-end audio itself also qualifies.
The Clayton M70 monoblock amps are certainly bargains--and so is the DH
Labs D-110 AES/EBU digital cable, which I've been using between my Timbre
TT-1 DAC (another serious bargain) and Wadia 20 transport. It's
the equal of any AES/EBU cable I've used, including my reference and three-times-the-price
Purist Audio link, and in ways that make listening to recorded music a
most participatory endeavor.
The D-110 is skillfully conceived and constructed. It features silver-coated
conductors sheathed in pure Teflon dielectric and completely protected
against the RFI/EMI nasties with a full outer shield. The connectors have
gold-plated OFC pins--a surprising touch at the cable's price: $89/meter,
with each half-meter adding $10. The D-110 is very supple, and the
reason reviewers make such a big deal out of this is that we're often pulling
out and installing new cables in tight spaces, and it's no fun wrestling
with a thick and unwieldy piece of wire around prized components--especially
with the extra clearance needed for the balanced connectors.
In my experience, few digital cables sound as different from one another
as any two of the formats (AES/EBU, coax, AT&T, etc.) do. In general,
AES/EBU is the warmest format, AT&T the most resolving, Coax falls
in between the two, although a bit closer to warmth than ultimate detail.
The very best cables minimize these differences, making it hard to know
exactly which format is in use. And so this happened to me during the audition
of the JPS Labs coaxial digital cable. I inadvertently switched to AT&T
and didn't realize it until I went to connect another cable. The JPS Labs
cable is splendid--coherent and sweet, fast and spacious.
These adjectives also apply to the DH Labs D-110 cable, but it also
adds a touch of warmth to the mix--a bit of brandy to your favorite audio
coffee. It, like most AES/EBU cables I've tried, sounds more analog-like
than any AT&T cable, but it doesn't do this my nipping and tucking
transients and overtones. The music is there, but it's liquid, fleshy.
I particularly enjoyed listening to female vocals with the DH Labs
cable--everything from Jennifer Trynin's Cockamamie to Cassandra
Wilson's Blue Light Before Dawn. And if you don't have Holly Cole's
Temptation, you're truly damned. Eclectic readings of Tom Waits
songs--bonus on top of bonus. In all cases, the voices were rock solid
and in scale--in short, about as real as reproduction gets.
I did much comparison withe Purist Audio AES/EBU link--the much-ballyhooed,
and terrific-sounding, water cable. The DH Labs cable, at less than
a third of the price, was the equal of the Purist cable in almost every
way. In fact, I know I'd be hard pressed to tell the two apart once
installed. The Purist cable is perhaps a touch warmer, but it would
be a light touch. You couldn't go wrong with either cable, but the DH Labs
D-110 is especially sane given its wallet-friendly price.
About the best advice I can give a digiphile, especially one with a
transport/DAC combo that will accommodate multiple formats, is to stay
cable-ready with an example of each format locked and loaded to allow for
easy switching--variety being, as it were, the spice of life (ahem). In
such a configuration the DH Labs D-110 cable fits the bill nicely. It sounds
terrific and will save you enough money to buy other cables without guilt--although
you may find that the others don't get much play. Righteously recommended.
...Marc Mickelson
Price: 1 meter - $89 USD ($10 each additional 1/2 meter)
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