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The FiiO D3 (D03K) is a compact, budget-friendly digital-to-analog audio converter supporting up to 192kHz/24bit PCM signals. It features optical and coaxial inputs with an easy switch, delivering high-fidelity stereo analog output via RCA and 3.5mm ports. Ideal for connecting modern digital devices like TVs, Blu-ray players, and game consoles to analog amplifiers or speakers, it offers low jitter and low distortion audio conversion powered by a mini USB adapter.
| ASIN | B009346RSS |
| Best Sellers Rank | #68,980 in Electronics ( See Top 100 in Electronics ) #148 in Digital-Analog Converters #157 in Signal Converters |
| Customer Reviews | 4.3 4.3 out of 5 stars (2,394) |
| Date First Available | August 29, 2012 |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Item Weight | 1.76 ounces |
| Item model number | D03K |
| Manufacturer | Fiio |
| Product Dimensions | 2.44 x 0.83 x 1.93 inches |
D**H
Good Cheapie/fun DAC upgrade for Sonos and other devices
Well, here is a quickie review on the 3rd gen D03K that may help others trying to research for specific uses. For the $$ this nice little piece is a great, fun DAC. I am a big music library fan, with a nice networked music library ripped in bit-perfect wav files. I had added a Sonos Connect (ZP90) player to my not so bad of shop stereo comprised of some great, mid-fi, mostly outdated components laying around: PSB large format bookshelf speaks, HK analog Pre/Pro, Onkyo discrete stereo amp, decent interconnects, etc. This system has a pretty nice level of fidelity to where you can hear things and I was experiencing one of the only weaknesses of Sonos, their DAC is a little disappointing when playing on higher fidelity setups where you can hear such things. The analog outs on the ancient Sony DVD unit I was using to play CDs was slaying the Sonos in SQ. Enter the FiiO unit. Set Sonos to uncompressed (if your files are lossless), fixed volume out (for full bit depth), coax digital to FiiO/analog to pre. Yes!! The result is blacker background, increased precision, tightened yet solid bass, in this case it did cure the minor dissatisfaction of listening through the onboard Sonos DAC. Since I had both Sonos/FiiO connected to the amp, asked my audiophile in training kid to do a blind A/B (I level matched between switching, so there was a 4 sec delay) he chose the FiiO every time in random selections over a several minute period. So, not saying this will beat a Benchmark, or mod the opamps to TL^%$$^ or anything like that. (it's a shop stereo man!)But it is pretty fun to enjoy a marked audio improvement with this cute, no-brainer install, under $30.00 little DAC. Sure it works great for stereo TV if the set is outputting PCM too.
T**X
Exactly as hoped it would work (which means better than expected).
It performed exactly as I hoped... which was better than I expected for my situation. So, so I setup an outdoor movie theatre for my friends and family and here was my situation: - bluray player connected to a projector via HDMI cable - speakers connected to an amp with only stero inputs and stereo outputs I needed a device to take the digital coax output from the bluray player and preferably convert it into stereo LEFT/RIGHT analog connections or at a minimum just convert it to mono to send to both speakers. I also didn't want to pay for a new amplifier or receiver to do this outside. So, I tried this device. It works great so far. It translated the PCM signal from the bluray to stereo analog signals (RCA) With the location of the player and the speakers to the listening audience, I got lucky and connected the left/right properly as I noticed when vehicles zoomed across the screen. Something I should have double checked before the movie, but it was done correctly, and showed that this little DAC worked exactly as I hoped. ** NOTE: If you're not getting sound, just check 2 things: 1. Change your sound output on the bluray player to PCM 2. Make sure the input selector (located on the bottom of the FiiO D3 is set to coaxial (not optical). I can not attest to it being great with 5.1 or 7.2 surround sound because I used it to feed the digital output from my bluray player and feed into a DAC (digital to analog converter) to make stereo sound for an outdoor movie experience (the HDMI went to the projector so I needed to get the sound out separately). In this capacity, it worked flawlessly. The sound signal appeared to be clean and pure, and I got great sound out of the speakers, which means that the components and cables in all phases went well. I bought this and another cable (a 3' from Monoprice - also has a review) in case 1 had an issue, but both worked beautifully. I expect this cable to last a long time and it works great, but I'd have no problems buying this again should I need another digital audio coax cable.
R**A
Rather impressed, just not ecstatic... due to high expectation
I have intentionally waited instead of rushing to write a review, wound up waiting for over 1 year. Bought this to connect a $39.99 Kodi box's (https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01DZOBQ6O/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o04_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1) Toslink output to my stereo, hoping to provide reasonable good sound to the cheap-o HTPC setup. (Turned a then 7-yr old netbook into OpenELEC box, but found out it couldn't render 1080p smoothly. $40 seemed a great deal for a Kodi box!) The connected components are from the mid-90s: Conrad Johnson pre-amp, Aragon amp, Martin Logan speakers, MIT interconnects & AudioQuest speaker cables. After living with this little DAC for a year, watching many movies, TV shows & critically listening to music of various genres -- Bossa Nova, classical (symphonic, chamber, piano, aria...), jazz, vocal, Broadway, pop rock, New Tango... I would say that this unit has performed well, just not quite stellar. It's no doubt an improvement over the Kodi box's analog output -- crisper, more dynamic & much improved soundstage. Compared to my CD player's (Micromega, also from mid-90's) sound, however, it provides more presence at the expense of sounding somewhat 'bright' & induces some degree of listening fatigue. Not to the point of ruining instrument timbre, of course, but making some brass instruments and vocals sound harsher than hearing them live. I do wonder, though, if some recordings' intentionally boosted 10K-12K range (some older sound engineers' trick to make tracks sound more 'alive' on average playback systems) may be partly to blame. This DAC may have simply revealed that overcompensating flaws in the sound mastering. With that said, however, occasionally, sibilance in female voice can become overbearing -- 'Summer Samba' from Patricia Barber's 'Night Club' for example, whereas the Micromega CD player presented the sibilance just fine without drawing one's attention away the wonderful piano playing. It may seem unfair to compare this DAC to something 50X its price, but here it is anyway. 8-) I actually did hope that the past 20-yr+ of technical advancements in DAC would have made this unit at least on par with the CD player. To be fair, most recordings do sound wonderful, including remastered older analog recordings. Ella Fitzgerald's 'Nearness of You' simply oozes honey. Pretty awesome. In summary, a very impressive product for the price. I'm quite grateful that the unit allows the Kodi box (with a 3TB USB HDD attached) to become a nice sounding music server, allowing me to program 2 hours of music using my phone from the kitchen while the system is in the adjacent family room. Also, this unit is my first foray into a separate DAC unit, proving to me that perhaps any source of digital music, be it a phone, PC, Android box (with the right digital output of course) can be part of a great sound system with the aid of a modest DAC such as this unit. Maybe one day, I will upgrade to an even better DAC (by FiiO as well?) Either way, I'm keeping this little guy around. If you are looking to use your PC or Android box as a source of music playback, this unit should be on your short list!
R**K
After using this product (almost daily) for the last 6 months, this is without a doubt - an excellent stereo DAC. As the description and product photos mention, this device can connect unidirectionally from: 1. Digital In - Either Optical or Coaxial cable on one end to 2. Analog Out - Both Standard 3.5mm (headphones or old 2.1 audio systems) and AV audio on the other end. The old speakers of my 2.1 Audio system could only connect via 3.5mm jack -- because the 3.5mm Output port was not present on the LED TV. Since the LED TV had Optical Audio Out, I interconnected a Digital Optical Audio cable (purchased separately) from the TV end with the 3.5mm jack (from Audio system) using this product and confirmed that the switch on the DAC is set to 'Optical input' in my case. After connecting the DAC, it needed a couple of minor confirmations on TV Software side (actual process differs based on TV manufacturer hence only describing generic steps below): 1. Confirm Digital Audio Out in your TV's Sound Settings is set to either: Auto or PCM as this DAC supports PCM only. 2. Switch on both TV and Audio system, play any random audio and listen for any lag/echo between the two systems. You may need to manually adjust PCM delay until both sounds seem to merge. After confirming above settings on the TV software side, the resulting audio sounded flawless from both the TV and speakers simultaneously. Audio was perfectly in sync between both systems. Since no power adapter is provided (only USB cable provided), any basic 1Amp power adapter can work. Luckily, the DAC can even be powered by the TV itself (just confirm if TV USB Connection is 1Amp; anything less may lead to static noise heard in audio system) Delivery was prompt (as per scheduled date), packaging was perfectly done and build quality is top-notch. After an initial setup requiring 5 mins, I've almost forgotten about the mini-DAC in the ensuing months.
T**L
I was dubious because of the cheap price, but this thing sounds great. No complaints.
M**N
Tardonu poco en llegar pero da excelente resultado en audio.
E**.
With this dac i switched from the internal Sony tv dac to this small external dac. Its solid and looks good. The sound improved. No more clipping and the sound is more clear. I cannot hear the difference anymore on my hifi speakers between the chromecast audio dac and this one. I guess the quality is similar.
M**N
J'aime bien écouter les films au casque, mais mon lecteur Blu-Ray/DVD Philips BDP2930 Lecteur DVD Blu-ray Full HD HDMI USB DiVx HD Wifi ready ne dispose pas de sortie analogique, et les circuits qui alimentent la prise casque de ma télé sont de qualité moyenne. La solution ? Ce convertisseur numérique-analogique, qui supporte les flux PCM jusqu'à 24 bits et 192kHz. Connecté sur la sortie SPDIF (coaxiale) du lecteur Blu-Ray, il délivre un signal analogique parfait, qu'il suffit d'injecter dans un ampli stéréo pour piloter des enceintes, ou dans un ampli casque comme le FIIO - E11 amplificateur de casque , pour obtenir un son clair et précis. Et comme le boitier s'alimente par un port mini-USB, je peux le brancher sur le port USB du lecteur Blu-Ray pour l'alimenter. Les plus : deux entrées numériques (coaxiale et optique), sélectables par un switch sous le boitier ; deux sorties analogiques (RCA et jack 3,5 mm) ; adaptateur secteur fourni. Les moins : ne supporte que les flux PCM, pas le DTS ou le Dolby Digital ; l'entrée optique utilise un petit bouchon, facile à perdre, plutôt qu'un clapet ; le cordon de l'adaptateur secteur est un peu court.
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