Studio premier qobuz12/9/2023 ![]() So I downloaded the Qobuz app to my phone, recovered my password because I can never remember what i use, and double checked that I have unlimited data and.voila! Streaming goodness. You could hear everything wrong with Spotify. Sounded fine with Apple Airpod Pros but with the better wired earbuds- suckish. I bought a nice pair of Campfire Audio earbuds from Nate that completely seal off my ears from the outside world without active noise cancelling, and they're now employed for keeping me entertained on my 45 minute commute. If you can find your CCK and connect to a DAC with a sample rate indicator, I'm sure you'll be able to confirm the same, use of the mconnect HD app to play Qobuz should result in the tracks being played at their native sample rates, but use of the Qobuz app will result in all tracks being played at 24/48.įor whatever reason a year off from taking the CTA to work means that I now get motion sick if I read on the train so. All of which means Apple had no reason to make that dongle work at anything greater than 24/48, as that is the device and iOS native sample rate. The only way to bypass the resampling to the device's native sample rate is to use an app with a custom driver such as mconnect HD, UAPP, or Neutron. Or maybe he just thought because a 24/192 track actually plays, that it must be playing at the native sample rate, which Archimago's test shows is simply not the case.Īrchimago also states he is using the superb Onkyo HF Player app, which does preserve track sample rates, whereas the screenshots in the Qobuz article show they are using their own app, which to the best of my knowledge only operates at the device's native sample rate.Ĭertainly it is that way on Android, when using the Qobuz app any/all tracks playback at the native sample rate of the device, for example 24/96 for my Galaxy S7, and 24/192 for my Moto X Pure. I'd skip that test and just buy mconnect HD for $5.99 instead.Ĭlick to expand.So I guess the author of the Qobuz article was just assuming that because the Cirrus Logic chipset in use is 24/192 capable, that the Apple dongle itself must also be. You can test that aspect if you have the Lightning CCK, and a DAC such as the D70 with a sample rate indicator, then you'd know for sure what the iPad will output. The Qobuz article doesn't mention the need for mconnect HD but I believe that is an omission on their part, the iPad will output 24/48 using the native Qobuz app to the best of my knowledge. I can vouch for mconnect HD on both Android and iOS, but I don't have that Apple dongle to test. This Qobuz article suggests that the Apple Lightning → 3.5mm adapter dongle is fully compatible, though many had unfortunately bought fakes, and even Amazon was selling fakes at one point (though probably unknowingly). The iPad itself will want to resample everything at 24/48, but the mconnect HD app should get around that for $5.99 with a suitable DAC dongle. Click to expand.I took a look and for iOS it appears mconnect HD is your best bet to get Qobuz at up to 24/192 from the iPad Pro, but that would assume your Lightning → 3.5mm adapter is capable of that like some others are.
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