Comment on I hate Wireless devices.
glorkon@lemmy.world 3 days agoWhen I mentioned “balanced output” I was referring to the analogue cable I’m using to connect the headphones to the DAC. Balanced means you get separate channels for each ear in your analogue signal path.
With a Bluetooth connected wireless headphone, it’s always balanced by definition. But when I said “that kind of sound quality isn’t possible” with Bluetooth, I was referring to a different problem: Digital to analogue signal conversion.
In my setup, it happens in the DAC which is audiophile quality. Signal path: PC - (digital USB) -> DAC -> Balanced cable (analogue) -> Headphones.
In Bluetooth, it looks like this: PC - Bluetooth (digital) -> Headphones (which do the digital to analogue conversion).
This signal conversion can’t match the quality of a dedicated desktop DAC.
lime@feddit.nu 3 days ago
i know what a balanced output is. i am saying that there are dedicated audiophile-grade, battery powered bluetooth receiver DACs with balanced output, which you can plug any wired headphones into. they usually come with a built-in mic and a lapel clip so you can use them to take calls.
glorkon@lemmy.world 2 days ago
Well, but that wasn’t the use case I was talking about at all.
I was talking DAC + wired headphone vs. Bluetooth headphones.
You’re talking about wired headphones with a Bluetooth DAC. Entirely different thing.
lime@feddit.nu 2 days ago
usually if you use bluetooth headphones it’s because you want wireless headphones. you were saying that it wasn’t possible to get the same quality when using bluetooth and i’m telling you it’s entirely possible. you weren’t talking about a usecase to begin with, only that you were not happy with the headphones you had tried.
glorkon@lemmy.world 2 days ago
Again, when I said it wasn’t possible to get the same quality using Bluetooth, I meant using Bluetooth headphones, not a Bluetooth DAC and wired headphones. And this is the second time I’m explaining that to you, not going to waste my time doing it three times.