Parasound Halo CD 1 Holm-Designed CD Player Preview
Summary
- Product Name: Halo CD 1 Holm-Designed CD Player
- Manufacturer: Parasound
- Review Date: January 08, 2013 10:20
- MSRP: $4500
- First Impression: Pretty Cool
Executive Overview
Parasound introduced the Parasound Halo CD 1, a high-end CD player that uses new CD playback and processing technology that is the result of a collaboration between Parasound and Holm Acoustics in Copenhagen, Denmark. The Parasound CD 1 uses a new method for playing CDs that is based on using a CD ROM drive instead of a conventional CD drive and a Linux-based computer to read and process the CD data. The CD ROM drive in the CD 1 runs at 4 times the speed of a conventional CD player drive in order to accumulate a vast amount of data. An on-board Intel ITX computer, running the Linux operating system kernel and Holm's proprietary software dramatically improves the reading of CD disc data. It analyzes CD data and reads every part of a CD as many times as are needed to significantly reduce errors and, accordingly, the negative effects of error concealment. The result is a nearly bit-perfect data stream.
Parasound claims that standard CD players cannot accomplish any of this because CD drives are traditionally slower data readers and the data must move through the buffer at the same speed it comes off the CD. Unlike the CD 1, standard CD players must transfer data to the DAC as soon as it is read from the CD. As a result, they don't have time to accumulate enough data in a buffer so that it can be analyzed and processed.
In addition to its Holm-designed CD processing technology, the Parasound Halo CD 1 is in all aspects a high-end audiophile player in keeping with the legacy of Parasound's Halo product family. It has a rugged aluminum chassis with extensive shielding for electrical and mechanical isolation. It has three separate power supplies for the analog and digital circuits. The outputs use premium balanced XLR connectors, gold-plated RCA outputs, and S/PDIF Digital audio outputs via 75-ohm BNC, coaxial, and optical connections.
The CD 1 also has a unique 'Discrete OpAmp' selector that gives users the option of listening to the analog outputs directly from the low noise National LME49990 op-amps or via discrete transistor output stages. The discrete output stage uses individual transistors in a Darlington configuration that operates in the feedback loops of the LME49990s. This has the potential to subtly change the sonic character of the CD 1, giving users choice.
The Parasound Halo CD 1 Compact Disc Player is being offered in both traditional Halo silver chassis and the new Halo all black finish. It is now shipping with a suggested retail price of $4,500. For more information, visit www.parasound.com.
3db;944446
Dude!! I'm a huge vinyl guy and buy new vinyl instead of downloads or CDs. Me thinks you misread my post. I was answering slipperybidness post #16 ... Nothing stupid about vinyl... It works really well with a good set-up and offers involvement that CDs and downloads can't. Please don't crap on something you may not agree with.
I'm sorry. I didn't mean to insult your religion, er, preference. If you're huge, that's none of my business, though it's bad for your health. Perhaps you could lose it 180 grams at a time.
Irvrobinson;944444
What planet have you been visiting? Vinyl is cool again. I know so many young people into vinyl because they believe it sounds better. Even the WSJ said that was so. Stupidity knows no generational bounds.
Dude!! I'm a huge vinyl guy and buy new vinyl instead of downloads or CDs. Me thinks you misread my post. I was answering slipperybidness post #16 ... Nothing stupid about vinyl... It works really well with a good set-up and offers involvement that CDs and downloads can't. Please don't crap on something you may not agree with.
3db;944413
Not without going used. I think everyone rips them to a hard disk now on a media player or computer and play it through those devices instead.
What planet have you been visiting? Vinyl is cool again. I know so many young people into vinyl because they believe it sounds better. Even the WSJ said that was so. Stupidity knows no generational bounds.
slipperybidness;944380
Coming from a person with a Turntable in their setup?
Not a thing wrong with a Turntable , but wacko $200 cables and little wooden cable stands, well that's another story
