California Audio Laboratories Aria Mk.III CD player Measurements

California Audio Laboratories Aria Mk.III CD player Measurements

The face was different, but the look was familiar. It should have been. The $2395 Aria Mk.III is a close cousin to the Aria II that I'd hung around with for about two years. Same sense of style, same heart of tubes. CAL Audio apparently made it what it is today, from the ground up. They even designed its transport and transport-drive circuitry in-house (footnote 1). In a high-end world which has gone increasingly to separate digital processors, CAL has been, up till now, a conspicuous holdout. They've only recently introduced their first outboard converter, and have in the past argued in favor of the all-in-one player. Something about reduced jitter from all the timing circuits being under one roof.

California Audio Laboratories Aria Mk.III CD player Tom Norton's Reference System

California Audio Laboratories Aria Mk.III CD player Tom Norton's Reference System

The face was different, but the look was familiar. It should have been. The $2395 Aria Mk.III is a close cousin to the Aria II that I'd hung around with for about two years. Same sense of style, same heart of tubes. CAL Audio apparently made it what it is today, from the ground up. They even designed its transport and transport-drive circuitry in-house (footnote 1). In a high-end world which has gone increasingly to separate digital processors, CAL has been, up till now, a conspicuous holdout. They've only recently introduced their first outboard converter, and have in the past argued in favor of the all-in-one player. Something about reduced jitter from all the timing circuits being under one roof.

California Audio Laboratories Aria Mk.III CD player Martin Colloms

California Audio Laboratories Aria Mk.III CD player Martin Colloms

The face was different, but the look was familiar. It should have been. The $2395 Aria Mk.III is a close cousin to the Aria II that I'd hung around with for about two years. Same sense of style, same heart of tubes. CAL Audio apparently made it what it is today, from the ground up. They even designed its transport and transport-drive circuitry in-house (footnote 1). In a high-end world which has gone increasingly to separate digital processors, CAL has been, up till now, a conspicuous holdout. They've only recently introduced their first outboard converter, and have in the past argued in favor of the all-in-one player. Something about reduced jitter from all the timing circuits being under one roof.

California Audio Laboratories Aria Mk.III CD player Page 2

California Audio Laboratories Aria Mk.III CD player Page 2

The face was different, but the look was familiar. It should have been. The $2395 Aria Mk.III is a close cousin to the Aria II that I'd hung around with for about two years. Same sense of style, same heart of tubes. CAL Audio apparently made it what it is today, from the ground up. They even designed its transport and transport-drive circuitry in-house (footnote 1). In a high-end world which has gone increasingly to separate digital processors, CAL has been, up till now, a conspicuous holdout. They've only recently introduced their first outboard converter, and have in the past argued in favor of the all-in-one player. Something about reduced jitter from all the timing circuits being under one roof.

California Audio Laboratories Aria Mk.III CD player

California Audio Laboratories Aria Mk.III CD player

The face was different, but the look was familiar. It should have been. The $2395 Aria Mk.III is a close cousin to the Aria II that I'd hung around with for about two years. Same sense of style, same heart of tubes. CAL Audio apparently made it what it is today, from the ground up. They even designed its transport and transport-drive circuitry in-house (footnote 1). In a high-end world which has gone increasingly to separate digital processors, CAL has been, up till now, a conspicuous holdout. They've only recently introduced their first outboard converter, and have in the past argued in favor of the all-in-one player. Something about reduced jitter from all the timing circuits being under one roof.

Ellington Reprise as download

Forums

Sorry for the cross-post - there's a thread under General R n R about Rhino offering lossless downloads and I have mentioned this there, but I didn't want any jazzbo to miss the news.

If this is inappropriate mods, please delete.

The generally expensive Rhino lossless downloads have one great bargain - Duke Ellington's 1960s Reprise recordings are available for $60. This *was* a Mosaic set, now OOP and going for reasonably big money on ebay.

Trying to go digital ... Help !!!

Hi all. This is my first post on this forum and hope some of you can clarify a few things.

First, the context. I presently have a Musical Fidelity A3 amplifier, a A3 CD reader, Kestrel speakers from the now defunct Meadowlark Audio Co., and a Grado 325 headset. This system cost me around 5000$ seven years ago.

I am now thinking of uploading my CD collection (about 250) on my computer alongside my purchased music from iTunes. I have a Nano iPod.

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