The Sound of Network audio on the PWD
My first experience with the PWD playing network audio, was with PS Audio's eLyric server program running on a Macbook Pro. I would later also install it on a Windows PC and even later on a Synology NAS. Networked audio, using the bridge makes for a different sound than using the regular digital inputs. Not only by using the Levinson no.390S as a transport, but also when comparing the digital output from the PC (using my best PC based solution) to the network audio, both coming from the same PC and both going into the PWD. Invariably, the Bridge input sounds much more solid and 3D, much more musical and more fluid. Also, the soundstage is both wider and deeper as well as leaping more toward the listener. It sounds a lot like the experiment I did with my Wadia 861 and what they call "clocklink". When I took out the signal from the transport and fed it back into the player while comparing clocklink on or off, there was almost exactly the same difference as heard with the PWD. I think it is safe to assume that we're talking about the audible effects of jitter here.
Compared to the Wadia 861
While on the Wadia subject, from memory, it is uncanny how much the PWD resembles the Wadia sound! Like the Wadia 861, the PWD is solid, articulated, dynamic, times well and is extremely life-like in that there isn't the slightest synthetic signature. Like the Wadia, the PWD has a large soundstage and is very engaging to listen to. Also, like the Wadia, the PWD's treble lacks that last bit of air, no matter which filter is selected. And that's strange, because the Apodising filter (nr.1) is also used by Ayre and in that application sounded very very open and airy. Don't get me wrong: the PWD is very open and detailed, perhaps even almost to the Wadia's standard, and the treble is as detailed as it gets, but it isn't the smoothest treble I ever heard nor is the the most extended. The lower treble is very open though, and for many listeners the PWD probably won't sound like it is lacking air at all.
Compared to the Levinson no.360S and 390S
Compared to both my Levinsons, the PWD has distinctly less air. Not only I heard this: two audiobuddies heard it too. But not only is some air missing compared to the Levinsons; they also have much smoother, more liquid treble as well as slightly more colour. They just sound more highend. But that's not to say that the Levinsons win out as they have some areas in which they perform significantly less well than the PWD. For starters, the PWD has better articulation throughout the bass and midrange. It is also more solid and much more dynamic and lively. But the most striking difference was in the way that the PWD managed to project a living, breating event in my listening room, much like the Wadia 861 is so well capable of. The result is of a foot-tapping, singalong, highly engaging presentation. This is difficult to put in words but easy to hear and can be summed up by saying that the Levinson DAC is more refined yet more witheld and dynamically more flat and the PS is less refined but more engaging and outgoing. An exception to this is the Levinson no.390S cd player, when used as an integrated player, that is. That way it performs the same magic with CD's as the PWD does with network audio, which is the living, breathing, highly engaging presentation, but also being extremely refined, smooth and airy at the same time.
Update July 2011: as the review proceeded, in a later stage I learned about some interesting variables...
This comment was added while writing the second part of this review, by then I had learned a great deal more than I knew in the beginnineg. By now I have discovered that not only does the hosting server/computer influence the sound; the network cable does too! Choosing the right combination changes things. A lot. Also, the PWD had one little surprise for me. But I won't spoil the surprise here. Unless you want to go to the Almost Final Conclusion straightaway...
Wolfson
As an interesting side note, the PWD uses a Wolfson dac. Rega also does. And indeed there's some of the foot-tapping, rhythmic presentation that the Rega also had. Of course there's much more to dac design than the chip used, but given that most other dacs and cd players I have had, use Texas instruments (Burr Brown), Cirrus Logic, Analog Devices and Philips dacs, and all sound smooth while the Rega and PS Audio use Wolfson and don't sound so smooth, I am tempted to see a correlation. I will investigate further and will of course post my findings here.
So, while the PWD beats replay via coaxial digital cable into the Levinson DAC; the Levinson CD player ultimately still beats the PWD. That's not to say that the PWD is flawed: it is more a matter of taste. I have no wife telling me to stop stacking components in my living room so I can afford to keep both solutions around. I use the CD player when I want to experience the best possible sound reproduction and resort to the PWD for all other instances when conveniance is more important, which is actually most of the time. And I haven't even touched yet on the ways to tweak the PWD, for example by choosing the appropriate power cable and interlinks or changing the fuses. This is for the next episode of this review.