In the case of the xDSD, the stacking pad and bands would not only be unnecessary, but actually somewhat useless due to the shape of the device. The only parts missing from iFi’s usual array are the silicon/rubber bands, silicon stacking pad, and their famous purple RCA cables. The various included adapters ensure that you can use the device on your desktop rig even if you don’t necessarily have the correct USB cable at hand. With the xDSD, iFi included pretty much all of the bits and bobs that we’ve grown accustomed to receiving with their portable devices. ![]() Removing the outer sleeve leaves us with a very familiar what box that simply has the iFi logo printed in silver. The outer sleeve boldly displays an image of the device, along with some logos and other text to showcase the fact that the xDSD has Bluetooth functionality, is MQA compatible, and can handle up to DSD512 files. The packaging for the xDSD is typical of what you could expect from iFi in being near identical to that of the rest of their Nano line of devices. ![]() Sample-rates: up to PCM 786 khz / DSD512 / MQA (Renderer).Inputs: USB, SPDIF (coaxial / optical), Bluetooth (AptX, AAC).
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |