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Benchmark Media Systems Inc. DAC1
Benchmark Media Systems Inc. DAC1
MSRP: $ 975.00

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Rating
Reviewed by:
Pierre Coach
(AudioPhile)

Review Date
February 8, 2010

Overall Rating
 5 of 5

Value Rating
 5 of 5

Used product for
1 to 3 months

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Review 1 of 19

Price Paid:  $0.00

Summary:
To all users of DAC1 & DAC1 USB; after reading Mr. Lee's post of being modestly impressed by the DAC's performance, I would recommend the following which is not mentionned clearly in the owner's manual. Open the unit and set the switch to 0 Db gain, then listen again. This DAc is the deal of deals since it will perform as well or nearly as well as DACs in 10K + CD players.


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Rating
Reviewed by:
Rick Lee
(AudioPhile)

Review Date
January 4, 2010

Overall Rating
 4 of 5

Value Rating
 4 of 5

Used product for
More than 1 year

Visitors rate this review
5.00 of 5, 1.00 votes

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Review 2 of 19

Price Paid:  $0.00

Summary:
Not a bad sounding unit and it can also do duty as your preamp in a stripped down three digital input environment as you can hook it up directly to a power amp and have a baby high end rig for not much dough. However I tried using it as the main DAC in my big system and it sounded pretty thin and uninvolving although it was clean enough for the money.

So I would put this one in the "bargain" lower to mid price DACs out there. Mine is just wonderful as a small system front end upstairs in a secondary listening room powering some BBC LS3/5 type Spendor monitors with a beefy poweramp I bought to feed them. I could imagine the Benchmark would be all you would need if you kept it in systems costing under ten grand. Just don't expect it to be too usefull once you hit 20 large as it lacks the punch and the information you would want once your system gets better and you can hear more.

I mean if you were asking what I think you need for a system costing 20k I would answer: Bryston BDA-1. It will reveal much more of the complete picture instead of stripped down outlines. And timbre is much better and highs are more musical. And you will suddenly see the whole room the recording was made in instead of left right and center... But this is not a review of the Bryston. Or the even more expensive Berkeley Audio DAC which at $5000 is frequently mentioned at the one above the Bryston at $2000.

I would conclude that at $1000 the Benchmark is a heck of a lot of kit for the money. If the layout and features fit your needs and the budget says "yes" on this one then I would recommend it without hesitation. It is miles ahead of what you get in the typical consumer CD player until you hit the units costing twice its price. And it has minimum three inputs or more depending on model. So for the money what's not to like?


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Rating
Reviewed by:

Leghorn

(Audio Enthusiast)

Review Date
October 30, 2009

Overall Rating
 5 of 5

Value Rating
 3 of 5

Used product for
3 Months to 1 year

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Review 3 of 19

Price Paid:  $0.00

Summary:
This is a great DAC! I bought it because it has a volume control and a USB input, so you can hook it up to your computer and have a complete audio front end. It also has balanced outputs, which are nice if you have an amplifier with balanced inputs, as I do (Monarchy SE-70s). This DAC is very accurate and musical. It reportedly measures well too (i.e., immune to "jitter"). There are certainly cheaper DACs out there, but they don't have the Benchmark's combination of features, musicality, and accuracy. The headphone outputs are handy when you don't want to wake the kids, but I rarely use them. It was easy to hook up to my MAc computer and iTunes.


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Rating
Reviewed by:

psyopwak

(Audio Enthusiast)

Review Date
June 9, 2009

Overall Rating
 5 of 5

Value Rating
 5 of 5

Used product for
More than 1 year

Visitors rate this review
5.00 of 5, 1.00 votes

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Review 4 of 19

Price Paid:  $0.00

Summary:
This has been the single best sounding component I have purchased and used in my system. It has REALLY opened up the sound of all my audio pieces.

I have a decent CD player, a Rega Apollo. This CD player has a unique top loading design, memory buffer, and the beam will initialize to scan the CD and choose the appropriate tracking for EACH CD to ensure the best sound. It also uses WOLFSON dacs. Although it sounded very good, by itself, outpacing my Arcam CD 72, it's sound was enhanced two or three notches with the optical connection to the Benchmarrk USBDAC1

The CD sound I have now is (has)-
1 Open
2 Detailed
3 Wide soundsatge
4 Smooth midrange
5 Crisp not shrill treble highs
6 Rythymic bass
7 Tight bass
8 Articulate vocals
9 Ability to seperate each instrument apart from another by reproducing it's sound accuratley.

Great deal


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Rating
Reviewed by:

Ajani

(Audio Enthusiast)

Review Date
December 24, 2008

Overall Rating
 5 of 5

Value Rating
 5 of 5

Used product for
1 to 3 months

Visitors rate this review
2.40 of 5, 5.00 votes

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Review 5 of 19

Price Paid:  $995.00 from Benchmark Website

Summary:
BENCHMARK ALONE

The Benchmark DAC1 is pretty much the Swiss Army Knife of High End Audio... it is quite simply one of the most useful products to own (assuming you have a digital source ie CD, DVD Player or Computer)... DAC1 is primarily a high Quality DAC but it is also an excellent headphone amp (read my system review below for more details on that use), and a Digital Preamp (if you upgrade to the DAC1 Pre, then you also get an analog input). It has both RCA and balanced outputs, which makes connecting it to a high end setup more flexible.

Build Quality is excellent, the unit looks and feels solid. The unit is small half width and and about half depth of regular audio components... which makes placement of the unit much easier... it is as comfortable on an audio rack as it is next to your computer.

The sound is neutral and detailed... IMO, it easily avoids the traps of being either overly-analytical and harsh/bright or being too warm with rolled off Bass and Treble... Highs are clear and extended, while Bass is rhythmic and deep. Midrange just oozes nuance and detail. To say I'm impressed with the unit is a serious understatement.

Below is a more detailed review of my full setup (as I feel that it is almost impossible to review a component in isolation, as it must interact with several other components in order to make music).

ENTIRE SYSTEM

OK, time to turn off 'When Doves Cry' long enough to write a review of my new system.

First a brief description of my setup:

I have my entire CD collection ripped (apple lossless compression) to a Western Digital external hard drive attached via USB to my HP laptop.

Next is a Squeezebox Classic that I use to stream the music from my laptop. The Squeezebox is connected via coaxial digital input to my Benchmark DAC1 using an Audioquest G-Snake RCA cable...

Finally, I have my AKG K701 Headphones connected to the left Headphone Output of the Benchmark....

Volume on the Squeezebox is set to max and I use the Benchmark to control the volume.

So to break it down:

Computer & Hard-Drive = Storage Medium (like a CD)
Squeezebox = Wireless Transport
Benchmark = DAC & Headphone Amp
AKG = Earspeakers

See poor quality attached picture of my setup below:



Total System Cost (excluding Computer and Glass Audio Stand) = Approximately $1,880.00 USD MSRP.

So for almost USD 2K, I've gone from listening to music on my laptop with a $15 pair of Panasonic headphones to still listening to music on my laptop with a pair of headphones... No wonder so many people think Audiophiles are lunatics...



OK now comes the hard part, describing the sound of my setup. A quote from Rob Reina in Stereophile, while reviewing the Monitor Audio RS6 Towers, best describes my experience with my system so far:

Quote:
after several weeks of listening to dozens of recordings through the Silver RS6, I could find not a single shortcoming—no deviation from neutrality, or any other compromise that I would normally expect to find in a cost-constrained design.

Yes, now that I've killed all my audiophile credibility (assuming I had any) by quoting Rob Reina, let me use my own words... The two words that constantly pop into my head when I hear my system are “Neutral” & “Detailed”.

I find that all the music I loved before I still love and and the stuff I didn't like... well I still don't like... but everything sounds better, clearer, more defined... from the way the system conveys the 80s rhythmic funk of Prince's 'Kiss' to the silky smooth vocals of a young Michael Jackson singing 'I want You back' with his 4 brothers in the Jackson 5... Through the heartfelt passion of Mariah Carey's 'We Belong Together' and the ultra smooth Saxophone of Kenny G's 'Havana'... From the sappy depressing vocals of Kenny Rogers 'She believes in me' to the Psychotic, Vengeful, Murderous delusions of Tupac's 'Hit Em Up'... The system is as comfortable with Bob Marley as it with the London Symphony Orchestra... I have wide and varied tastes in music, so no one trick pony is going to work with all or even most of my albums... I've certainly heard more romantic, beat intense or vocal specialized systems and while each would make specific songs in my collection sound better, they would also totally ruin the remainder of my songs... This system has done a better job than any other I've heard so far of getting everything right....

When I first ordered the Benchmark/AKG (BA) setup I was hoping for a sound like my previous all time favorite setup of Monitor Audio Gold Series 20 Towers with Musical Fidelity X-Series V8 Amp & CD, but was really expecting the bright and overly analytical sound of a B&W 805S, Rotel Combo I'd auditioned a few times... Surprisingly, I got neither... what I got was much more Revel than either Monitor Audio or B&W... just plain neutral and smooth...

So the sound: Vocals are extend and airy without sounding bright or edgy... The mids are full and detailed... I'm hearing so many little sounds and effects that I've never heard before, in songs I've played hundreds of times... Bass is tight, deep and most importantly fast (the speed is like the difference between a pair of aluminum 6.5 inch woofers versus a large 12 or 15 inch bass driver)... Rap and Rock music have the appropriate low-end authority to get your head moving and your toes tapping... But speaking of rhythm, my standard test of any system must include how it performs with the 80s pop classic 'Billie Jean' by Michael Jackson (did I really have to say who sang Billie Jean?)... The BA setup had me breaking out into moonwalks and fondling my crotch obscenely... After the opening drum sequence there's a little 'chicu uhh' effect at the beginning of Billie Jean that I had previously enjoyed most on tubed setups... shockingly, after a week of break-in the BA setup is doing a great job of getting that effect right, while still maintaining the overall rhythm and pace of the song (generally done by solid state gear)... The soundstage is excellent for a pair of headphones, the music sounds more like it's floating around your head, with the lead vocals coming from somewhere in your forehead, rather than in your ear canal... sadly, this is the one letdown of a headphone setup for me, it generally sounds more like you are surrounded rather intimately by the band, instead of sitting a few rows back at a concert.... But once in a while, I'll hear a sound or voice pop out of nowhere, from a distance and I'll spin my head around, thinking someone has entered the room.. just to realize that it was part of the song... At those times I think I understand what E-Stat said about his system being able to fool the senses (not that I'm comparing the overall sound quality of his system with mine... I'm not that delusional)...


Verdict:

For a normal person $2K for a headphone setup is a total rip-off (since, to be quite honest, the $15 Panasonics connected to the laptop, do an ok job of portraying the essentials of the music)... but by Audiophile standards, the BA setup is an amazing bargain.. especially when you consider that a $500 pair of headphones will easily rival the sound quality of a $5K floorstander...

If you are an audiophile on a tight budget and/or with a tight space, you really should consider a Headphone setup... Even if you are a planar lover, you can get a nice pair of Electrostatic Earspeakers for less the $500... Just try getting a pair of new Electrostatic Towers for anywhere near that price! In fact, even if you already have an expensive reference system, I'd suggest auditioning several Headphone/Amp combos... as you might be shocked at how good they can sound...

Strengths:
Versatility, Sound Quality, Build Quality, Price, Looks

Weaknesses:
Could use a remote (but that's really just nitpicking at this price).

Similar Products Used:
Multiple CD and DVD players from Arcam, Rotel, Marantz, NAD, Cambridge Audio etc...


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