I’m currently running a Wiim Ultra into KEF LSX II speakers. Previously I used optical out (with fixed volume) to keep the signal digital and ensure bit-perfect transmission to the KEFs.
Today, I decided to test the line out to the KEF aux in. On the WiiM, I selected the "Corrected Minimum Phase Fast Roll-off" DAC filter. To my surprise, I found the sound subjectively improved and much preferred it over the optical connection.
Here is where I am confused: I know the KEF LSX II uses an internal ADC to digitize all analog inputs for DSP processing. Theoretically, using line out creates a redundant conversion chain (WiiM DAC -> analog -> KEF ADC) and is no longer bit-perfect.
Why does the "messier" double-conversion chain sound better than the direct digital link? Is the WiiM's DAC just that good and it can outweigh the theoretical loss of transparency?
Today, I decided to test the line out to the KEF aux in. On the WiiM, I selected the "Corrected Minimum Phase Fast Roll-off" DAC filter. To my surprise, I found the sound subjectively improved and much preferred it over the optical connection.
Here is where I am confused: I know the KEF LSX II uses an internal ADC to digitize all analog inputs for DSP processing. Theoretically, using line out creates a redundant conversion chain (WiiM DAC -> analog -> KEF ADC) and is no longer bit-perfect.
Why does the "messier" double-conversion chain sound better than the direct digital link? Is the WiiM's DAC just that good and it can outweigh the theoretical loss of transparency?