Hopefully this doesn't come across as "teaching", but I have the feeling that those who find the Phasure NOS1 DAC to lack in the bass a bit, may need some explanations from my side, or merely : how to look at things. The way I'll write it is no different from always, but there *is* a difference of course : now you can check it yourself.
First my "statement" or own observation : There is *more* bass and punch, and the better all is, the better that gets. "More" means : compared to anything which doesn't sound so good in general. Tough to say by itself, but I am fairly sure this is true.
Additionally : it is clear to me what people use for bass drivers - whom explicitly do not suffer from this "syndrome" ...
Let's first go to an example. Of course I chose the example, and may "you" have examples which proove the other way around, let them know so we can all check it out;
Important : I am using W7 SP1 (and this *really* matters).
Let's take "Basie Jam" (1) from Count Basie. I have always found this album a most natural sounding album, and although I really don't know, it seems it isn't messed with (like just taken with two microphones, no (re)mixing afterwards). Let's take the second track "Hanging out";
A first thing you should notice is the enormeous "straight" tones coming from the metal string electric jazz guitar which is the virtue of very low jitter. If you are able to compare this with a higher jitter DAC, you may do so, briefly. So, besides you may learn from this how low jitter can express, you can also learn from it what it *does*. It keeps instruments and voices on key so to say, and for the higher frequencies you may perceive that in strings like this. Weary straight so to say.
Ok, before I'm changing the subject ... listen to the bass here. To my mind the balance and impact is exactly right, and once the volume is "realistic" enough, I really don't see how this bass should produce more low frequencies. I "see" the instrument, and it can't or otherwise it will be an unreal mess.
In the mean time listen to the dynamically played drums, like a kind of wild jazz combo can use it. No real breaks are used, but fairly full powered hits on a snare (with the snare off) and a rise time that scares for reality. You want that more punchy ? then the snare will turn into a floor tom, while it isn't ... The dynamics will disappear, and it will be a mush thing.
Moral : know what you listen to, and since the NOS1 was made for that anyway : project your thinking on that particular instrument.
Hoping that you have this album and could listen to this track (or the others), it will be all so useful if you now also have "The Timekeepers" (Basie + Peterson). The track doesn't matter here, so you might just as well start at track 1.
If all is right you will perceive a snorring of the bass on this album, unheard for acoustic basses. Snorring is for electric basses, right ? haha. Well, maybe it is an electric bass then. I don't know. But now :
Do you hear this snorring ? It is all over in each track and never stops. If you don't hear it, something is "wrong" in the first place. And, I think this is important for our "bass judgement".
On a side note : This is why it is important to use W7 SP1, because Vista will make a mush of this, and no snorring will be audible. Merely "a bass". It will be perceived as smomewhat lower in key I think, but it's not the instrument anymore.
But was this a side note, or was this maybe an indication of how things can go wrong without you knowing it ? I mean, compare the both albums, and for those who don't hear the snorring in the second album, what's wrong with that second album compared to the first ?
Aha ...
Apart from proper control to begin with (and this *is* all about jitter - where especially the lower regions are far more difficult were it about jitter in general), I for now (dangerously) assume that hose who want more bass don't hear the snorring either. This can be about control in the amps, but mainly will be about the weight of the diaphragm of the bass driver; the snorring will imply for an "on-off" thing I often talk about, and which is similar to a frequency but unrelated to the pitch, and it needs sheer speed to do it. In this case the frequency where the on-off happens will be dealt with by the woofer, and it must be able to follow ... If it can't, there will be "a bass" with some bassy tone. Most probably you will hear the strings allright, but the bass will sound the same on both albums and it will be a good indication that you "can't" make a proper judgement on the bass coming from the NOS1 ...
This is all quite speculative, and maybe I am completely wrong. So, I just try to imagine what could be going on, and imagine a woofer which is more slow just can't produce the individual vibes, and therefore misses half of the "SPL" in this region. Thus, when a 100Hz has to be followed which also is quite squarey (which a string like this will be), it may be too difficult and not much SPL comes from it.
And this is to be compared with the not squarey at all because the source (DAC) can't do it, and now we suddenly have a more sine like (no snorring) wave, and the 100Hz can be followed easily. More bass ...
If you *do* perceive that snorring, try to imagine what would happen if more bass would come from it all. Maybe you even have a knob for it. But obviously the snorring will go away, right ? All I want to say with this, is that this by itself is a measure of whether things are correct or not. Such more technical "measure" things are eve needed, because to my own experience it is not so anymore (with the NOS1) that adding too much bass will show in colouring (before I used that to calibrate - and which was failry easy).
Of course I have many more reasons to "know" that something must be going on when not enough bass is perceived, and in the end it just needs the examples of how low and powerful things can go. Or more easy maybe : how much body a piano has, and more will be too much (that's fairly easy to judge). But if the snorring example works, it would be a more technical thing easy to check for, and we don't need to discuss in writing how much body a piano should have.
All 'n all, if some other DAC produces more low, more punch and seems to carry more body in everything, please try to judge that for the particular instrument and whether it is correct. And remember, you should compare with reality just because the NOS1 can do it. The time of "how to get rid of this disturbance" is behind us. It is now all "does this sound correct". I hope you will believe me !
Peter