Hello Folks,
So I've been looking around for some time and I'm really excited to dive into the Bottlehead world. I'm relatively new to getting serious about hi-fi audio but have been dabbling for years. I'm quite green with electronics, though I do plan on completing some simple kits from Adafruit to help shore up my soldering skills. Until now, I've managed to put a mod chip into a Playstation (as a teen) and have managed to fry an XBox trying to do the same thing. Still though, I'm a maker at heart, so I'm excited at the possibilities.
OK, so, a couple of questions. Being that I'm quite green in both DIY electronics and I was hoping for some guidance. Currently, I'm running a Pro-Ject RPM 1.3 with a Sumiko Pearl cartridge. It's feeding directly into a Kenwood AR404 stereo reciever phono input, which then powers two soon-to-be Focal 706's. I'd like to start putting together a system to replace the Kenwood at the heart of my system. Rather than buying off the rack, I figured I'd start building. Here's the current setup:
Sources:
Macbook Pro (eventually it'll have a proper DAC on it, but right now, it's the stock DAC on the MBP)
Pro-Ject Turntable
Output:
Focal 706 Bookshelves (rated at 90db sensitivity)
Either HD598, HD650 or a lower end pair of Grado's
I was thinking I'd start off with a Reduction and hook it into a line-in on the Kenwood. Afterwards, I'd replace the Kenwood altogether with maybe a Stereomour? What are your thoughts on that?
Reduction questions:
1. Does this approach sound reasonable?
2. Does this thing output enough power to power some headphones or is that crazy talk?
A couple of Stereomour questions (didn't want to crosspost into that forum, but may if this isn't the right place):
1. How easy is it to mod to use a decent entry-mid range set of headphones?
2. Any thoughts on how it'll perform with those Focal's?
3. I should be able to MBP -> Stereomour, right?
I realize I probably sound like a complete newbie, but hey, gotta start somewhere, right? I really really appreciate the help and advice, looking forward to your thoughts.
So I've been looking around for some time and I'm really excited to dive into the Bottlehead world. I'm relatively new to getting serious about hi-fi audio but have been dabbling for years. I'm quite green with electronics, though I do plan on completing some simple kits from Adafruit to help shore up my soldering skills. Until now, I've managed to put a mod chip into a Playstation (as a teen) and have managed to fry an XBox trying to do the same thing. Still though, I'm a maker at heart, so I'm excited at the possibilities.
OK, so, a couple of questions. Being that I'm quite green in both DIY electronics and I was hoping for some guidance. Currently, I'm running a Pro-Ject RPM 1.3 with a Sumiko Pearl cartridge. It's feeding directly into a Kenwood AR404 stereo reciever phono input, which then powers two soon-to-be Focal 706's. I'd like to start putting together a system to replace the Kenwood at the heart of my system. Rather than buying off the rack, I figured I'd start building. Here's the current setup:
Sources:
Macbook Pro (eventually it'll have a proper DAC on it, but right now, it's the stock DAC on the MBP)
Pro-Ject Turntable
Output:
Focal 706 Bookshelves (rated at 90db sensitivity)
Either HD598, HD650 or a lower end pair of Grado's
I was thinking I'd start off with a Reduction and hook it into a line-in on the Kenwood. Afterwards, I'd replace the Kenwood altogether with maybe a Stereomour? What are your thoughts on that?
Reduction questions:
1. Does this approach sound reasonable?
2. Does this thing output enough power to power some headphones or is that crazy talk?
A couple of Stereomour questions (didn't want to crosspost into that forum, but may if this isn't the right place):
1. How easy is it to mod to use a decent entry-mid range set of headphones?
2. Any thoughts on how it'll perform with those Focal's?
3. I should be able to MBP -> Stereomour, right?
I realize I probably sound like a complete newbie, but hey, gotta start somewhere, right? I really really appreciate the help and advice, looking forward to your thoughts.