Pete,
First of all, thanks to you and the other members of the San Diego, Los Angeles and Palm Springs audio communities that organized this shoot-out. Your review was extremely well written and it looks like your process was beyond reproach. These types of reviews are too rare in the world of high end audio and a greatly needed adjunct to "professional reviews".
I have had my NWO2.5 since late December and while I have not had the luxury of comparing it to all of the machines you tested (only the EMM Labs Comb and DCS single box units), I would agree completely with your conclusions, especially the last part that the NWO2.5 brings you the closest to real live music (particularly on SACD and DVD-A). I listen to live music on average once a week - acoustic and amplified - and the NWO2.5 brings me the closest to that experience of any digital source I have heard...and I would go a step further and say that when playing DVD-A and SACD on the NWO2.5 it meets and exceeds several of the SOTA phono set-ups I've heard, although I want to be clear in saying that I have not yet A/B'ed it against the best of the best vinyl rigs.
On that point, I hope some organziation like yours takes on the challenge of doing a similar blind shoot out of the NWO2.5T and a few of the SOTA phono rigs. I think the results would be very interesting indeed. Perhaps SOTA vinyl would still win, but I think the performance gap has been reduced considerably over the past year and will continue to shrink going forward.
Thanks again Pete for taking the time to do this shoot out and share the results.
First of all, thanks to you and the other members of the San Diego, Los Angeles and Palm Springs audio communities that organized this shoot-out. Your review was extremely well written and it looks like your process was beyond reproach. These types of reviews are too rare in the world of high end audio and a greatly needed adjunct to "professional reviews".
I have had my NWO2.5 since late December and while I have not had the luxury of comparing it to all of the machines you tested (only the EMM Labs Comb and DCS single box units), I would agree completely with your conclusions, especially the last part that the NWO2.5 brings you the closest to real live music (particularly on SACD and DVD-A). I listen to live music on average once a week - acoustic and amplified - and the NWO2.5 brings me the closest to that experience of any digital source I have heard...and I would go a step further and say that when playing DVD-A and SACD on the NWO2.5 it meets and exceeds several of the SOTA phono set-ups I've heard, although I want to be clear in saying that I have not yet A/B'ed it against the best of the best vinyl rigs.
On that point, I hope some organziation like yours takes on the challenge of doing a similar blind shoot out of the NWO2.5T and a few of the SOTA phono rigs. I think the results would be very interesting indeed. Perhaps SOTA vinyl would still win, but I think the performance gap has been reduced considerably over the past year and will continue to shrink going forward.
Thanks again Pete for taking the time to do this shoot out and share the results.