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McIntosh DS200 network streamer/DAC

McIntosh Labs DS200 Streamer/DAC

Just as you recognise a giraffe when you see one, it’s difficult to confuse the work of McIntosh Laboratory, Inc. of Binghamton, NY, with that of any other hi-fi brand. The company established its industrial design vocabulary quite some time ago. The absence of updates since indicates that the company does not consider it broken. The McIntosh DS200 network streamer/DAC is a thoroughly modern device. However, it arrives in the classic McIntosh livery. Similar to McIntosh products of the last 50 years or more. Whether a design is appealing is essentially a matter of personal taste.

Spec effectiveness

What is less subjective is the effectiveness of the specification for the DS200. For instance, consider the “audiophile grade” quad-balanced, eight-channel DAC that McIntosh has fitted. It’s suitable for resolutions up to 32-bit/384 kHz, DSD 512, and DXD up to 384 kHz. The company points to its “huge dynamic range’ and “low distortion” for its inclusion.

Various methods get that digital audio information to that impressive DAC. Physical connectivity includes a pair of digital coaxial inputs and their digital optical equivalents. All four support up to 24-bit/192kHz resolution. There’s a balanced AES/EBU input (24bit/192kHz once again) and a USB-B that can extend all the way to 32bit/384kHz, DSD512 and DXD384kHz. An HDMI ARC socket allows your television to become part of your system, and there’s also a proprietary McIntosh MCT connection – it enables the company’s CD/SACD transports to bypass the limitation that SACD does not prefer to be output via S/PDIF. An Ethernet socket provides robust network connectivity.

The wireless equivalents extend to Bluetooth 5.0 with aptX HD codec compatibility and dual-band Wi-Fi. A Wi-Fi or Ethernet connection to your router enables the DS200 to function with Apple AirPlay, Google Cast, Spotify Connect, Qobuz Connect and TIDAL Connect. Furthermore, the McIntosh is not only Roon Ready but also holds Roon Tested certification.

Put simply, it does the lot!

Outputs

A pair of unbalanced RCA sockets or a pair of balanced XLR sockets retrieve the audio once the DAC has completed its function. It’s the (admittedly predictable) presence of these analogue outputs that makes me ponder why there are no analogue inputs. These analogue outputs can be configured for fixed or variable gain. The McIntosh DS200 network streamer/DAC can operate as a source or a preamplifier for digital sources.

McIntosh Labs DS200 Streaming DAC-rear

As for the usual McIntosh-isms of glowing green Gothic script, bright blue display, and black glass fascia, it is very much business as usual. Given the enduring success of McIntosh, ‘business is usual’ is precisely what people want. Even a glass faceplate that collects fingerprints with the zeal of a crime scene investigator is a positive to McIntosh users. It’s an excuse to make their DS200 even shinier.

Control buttons cover the major functions like ‘power on/off’, ‘Bluetooth pairing’, and various playback controls—they operate with a pleasing positivity, much like the little remote control handset provided, which duplicates many of these functions. However, the turn/push controls, one on either side of the central display, managing volume level, input selection, and access to the menus, do not share that positive feel.

The third option

Then, there is the display. We live in a world where network audio streamers, available at virtually every price point, either lack a display altogether or feature a bright, crisply rendered, and colourful display for album artwork and other elements. McIntosh, however, has decided there’s a third option: a classic dot-matrix display. Far from ‘retro’, this is a part of the McIntosh DS200 network streamer/DAC’s ‘kerb appeal’.

With the DS200 connected via its unbalanced RCAs to a Naim Uniti Star serving as an amplifier and a pair of Bowers & Wilkins 702 S3 Signature floorstanders at the end of the chain, it’s not difficult to overlook the concerns regarding the perceived value of the aesthetics and instead focus on the exceptional quality of the sound this streamer produces. Whether streaming high-resolution content from network-attached storage, enjoying the best TIDAL Connect has to offer, or even using Bluetooth with the aptX HD codec, the McIntosh provides one of the most complete and thoroughly satisfying ways to access digital audio content that this kind of investment can procure.  

McIntosh Labs DS200 Streaming DAC

Switch between a 24-bit/192 khz FLAC file of Bruckner’s Symphony No.9 recorded by the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra under Manfred Honeck [Reference Recordings] and a 24-bit/96 khz FLAC file of Lite Spots by Kaytranada [XL], and you’ll learn almost everything there is to learn about the way the DS200 goes about things. The sound it produces is quite strongly at odds with its unrefined appearance.

Deftly naturalistic

In every circumstance, the DS200 is deftly naturalistic and maintains an utterly convincing tonal balance, and its frequency response is similarly judicious. From the profoundly deep bass to the bright and substantial treble, the McIntosh offers an even-handed listening experience. The ability to extract a significant amount of detail from recordings is a definite advantage, as the DS200 maintains a properly balanced overall picture while keeping a vigilant eye on the most transient, minor, and tangential details in a recording. If the information is available to be revealed, it will undoubtedly be, along with the appropriate weighting and context. This fine detail retrieval only serves to enhance the overall recording; it is never the focal point.

The significant dynamic shifts of a massed symphony orchestra are fully described. They are also conveyed with the sort of casual authority that denotes effectively limitless headroom. The more nuanced dynamics of harmonic variation that the same orchestra indulges in are handled with similar command.

Latent potency

There’s a latent potency to the McIntosh DS200 network streamer/DAC that’s even more effective because it’s not a showoff. Only large swings in intensity or outright attack prompt the DS200 to engage the afterburners. Yet, at the same time, it doesn’t lack subtlety. There’s a nimbleness and lightness of touch that stands in contrast to the machine’s brooding presence.  

There’s no denying the considerable low-frequency presence of DS200. It can deliver an implacable force when a recording demands it. This network streamer/DAC addresses bass information with precise positivity. It also pays just as much attention to decay, ensuring that rhythmic expression remains coherent and confident. Above, there’s an eloquence to the midrange reproduction, along with an abundance of detail revealing a singer’s character and technique. At the top end, the McIntosh achieves an endlessly pleasing balance between brilliance and substance, particularly in the onset of treble sounds. It expertly controls their decay.

Our main weapon is spaciousness

All of this takes place on a spacious and reasonably deep soundstage that is almost fanatically defined. It provides ample elbow room for every member of this orchestra I keep referencing. This allows them to perform their part unhindered by the neighbouring instrumentalist. This organisation and separation do not come at the expense of unity, however. The DS200 possesses the happy knack of offering a genuine sense of togetherness, of singularity, to recordings. The sense of performance is always strong. 

McIntosh products have a distinct set of design criteria that sets them apart from the audio zeitgeist. And the McIntosh DS200 network streamer/DAC meets those criteria perfectly. But more importantly, this demands to be heard if sound quality is of utmost importance (as it should be). 

Technical specifications

  • Type: network streamer/preamplifier/DAC
  • Analogue inputs: none
  • Digital inputs: Ethernet; 2 x digital coaxial; 2 x digital optical; AES/EBU; MCT; USB-B; HDMI ARC; dual-band wi-fi; Bluetooth
  • DAC resolution and supported digital formats: 32bit/384kHz PCM; DSD512 (inc dff/dsf/dst); DXD384kHz. APE; FLAC; MP3; Ogg; WAV
  • Music services and wi-fi inputs: Apple AirPlay; Google Cast; Roon; Spotify Connect; TIDAL Connect, Qobuz Connect
  • Analogue outputs: Balanced XLR; unbalanced RCA
  • Digital outputs: none
  • Frequency response: Hz – 60kHz
  • Distortion (THD + noise): 0.005%
  • User interface: ascia controls; remote control handset
  • Dimensions (H×W×D): 52 x 445 x 432mm
  • Weight: 9.3kg
  • Price: 5,890, €5,990, $4,000

Manufacturer

McIntosh Labs

Homepage – https://www.mcintoshlabs.com

UK distributor

Fine Sounds

www.finesounds.com 

+44(0)7714 232033

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Tags: MCINTOSH DS200 NETWORK STREAMER/DAC

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