I am trying to understand what makes a $10,000 CD player better than a $1,300 universal player.
Here is what I am contrasting. McIntosh sells the MCD1100 for $10,000.
Oppo sell's the 105 for $1,300.
They both use the same DAC. Difference here is that McIntosh uses 4 DAC chips per channel. The OPPO uses one for stereo. That is 8 to one. Does this help the sound? How?
What about other factors?
How do things like power supplies (type and quality) , clock accuracy, configuration of dacs, chassis rigidity, etc. effect the sound.
Why is the McIntosh superior in all these areas and how does that translate to better sound?
Is this better sound measurable? Is it within human hearing limitations to be an audible difference?
It seems no one knows. At least not message board posters as I can't get an answer anywhere. Figured I'd try here.
Most of what makes a $10K CD player better than a $1300 universal player will have everything to do with looks, feel, and ergonomics, and, at least in my opinion, very little to do with audible performance. The analog section might be better, but the Oppo's looks pretty good. I've seen the MCD1100, and it makes the Oppo look like a cheap piece of junk. Most of the McIntosh chassis, and the drawer mechanism, is aluminum and glass, while the Oppo is plastic and sheet metal. The controls feel different. The McIntosh's chassis layout looks like artwork, and it's full of what looks like higher quality components. McIntosh will support the 1100 forever, and since they've been around forever (>50 years) it's likely they'll always be there to fix it. And it's made in New York rather than China.
The quad-balanced stuff for the DAC is just a standard feature of the Sabre ES90185 8-channel DAC. It's a strapping mode, not some arduous design effort by McIntosh. Not only does the Oppo use the same DAC, it uses two of them, one dedicated for quad-balanced mode in stereo, and the other for 7.1. The Sabre DAC was intended to be a specification tour de force, and I understand the 8-channel mode reduces noise by about 6db, which is a lot, except that it's 6db below the competition, which is at about -114db. Once you get down to -114db I doubt any improvement is audible.
If all you care about is sound and value I'd get the Oppo. The McIntosh is for people who love fine machinery and are willing to pay a lot for great ergonomics. If that's you, go for the McIntosh. If not, I suspect the Oppo will sound about the same.