The SOtM sMS-200 has been the talk of the town in recent months…and for good reason. A lot has already been written on its functionality and features set so this review is primarily focused on the sonic qualities of this device. First allow me to get a few setup formalities out of the way.
After trying the various software players from Squeezelite, Shairport, MPD, etc the Roon player produced the best sound quality so I’ve stuck with it for this review. Unsurprisingly, the differences in sonic quality were significant between the players. For example, with a hard drive connected directly to the sMS-200 and using Squeezelite I was getting a borderline dark sound. Move back to Roon and everything opens up. It wasn’t that it sounded bad, it just had a completely different signature depending on the player used in this setup. (shrug)
I’ve gone over this topic a few times and the bottomline is, lower noise and better fidelity. But for kicks I’ve done a quick comparison between having the sMS-200 networked into the Chord DAVE and attaching it directly to a Macbook Pro + W4S Recovery USB conditioner. No matter how good your USB conditioner is, it just won’t sound as good as if you were to use a NAA. You’ll also get fewer dropouts and stutters in your stream. Here were a few audible drawbacks of using USB directly:
Frankly, once you go with network streamers, you’re never going back to direct USB.
Typically adding more components to the chain will degrade the signal, even if it’s meant to help improve said signal. Having done some testing with and without the W4S Recovery USB conditioner, I much prefer the W4S Recovery in the chain. It adds a sufficient level of low-end presence, rumble, and slam. Tonality is also improved. It just sounds more natural holistically and there’s really no drawbacks from using the W4S Recovery in this particular setup with the Chord DAVE. I would definitely recommend it for listeners with brighter gear, like the Focal Utopia. A win for the W4S Recovery. I have the Rev C board which I’m not sure has been released yet but should be their latest model. Given my experience with other USB conditioners and what I heard from just using the Recovery, I’m sure the sMS-200 will benefit from these type of devices. They will be releasing their tX-USBUltra soon.
UPDATE 4/11/2017: Unlike the microRendu, the sMS-200 does require a USB conditioner. The sound is a bit too bright/lean otherwise. This is a tiny annoyance as you’ll have to have two high quality USB cables in the chain (Couldn’t use an adapter at the DAVE while RCA line-outs are being used. The ports are too close together). The alternative is to use S/PDIF with the dx-USB HD but you’ll be limited to 24/192. Some say you’ll get better audio quality this way anyway. I haven’t tested this.
SOtM shipped their mBPS-d2s along with the sMS-200 because running things off just batteries is just awesome (and all that low-noise mumbo jumbo). I was curious as to how much of a difference this battery pack actually makes..
Truly reaffirms my thoughts on the PS Audio LANRover but short answer is HELL YEAH. If you’re running a standard CAT6/7 cable from Monoprice or Amazon, get yourself a high quality ethernet cable today. Chances are that harshness you’re hearing is from that stupid cable. Streaming music is a whole new ballgame and your ethernet cable could be your largest barrier to high fidelity. I would even go as far to say even more so than your amp or other interconnects costing many times more. Its affect on sound quality for a networked streamer cannot be understated.
Personally, I would just go straight for a SOtM dCBL-CAT7. You’ll continually reap musical enjoyment as your system evolves and unlike most components, probably doesn’t have to be replaced often. It’s pricey but after hearing it, my wallet just magically left my jean pocket and appeared in front of me with a golden aura and sparkles all around it. I’m not an impulsive buyer by any means. I’m just floored by the performance of this cable and I find it a worthwhile investment. If anything, I wish I had invested in a cable like this earlier as I’m disgusted by how much fidelity I was losing all these years.
You know a device is special when you listen to an album you don’t like…and actually enjoy it. I’m probably one of the very few who don’t like (or hate) Beck’s Sea Change. I appreciate the sound engineering but not my forte as far as music. With the sMS-200 this album was incredible and I actually added a few songs to my testing playlist. I don’t remember ever finishing this album from start to finish. The sMS-200 is making its presence known.
Here are a few more of my raw notes for a couple of tracks:
Radiohead – Identikit
Nirvana – Heart Shaped Box
Dr. Dre – Still D.R.E.
Nirvana (Unplugged in New York) – Where Did You Sleep Last Night
Marilyn Manson – Third Day of a Seven Day Binge
Massive Attack – Angel
Marian Hill – Down
Rickie Lee Jones – St. James Infirmary
Paramore (The Final Riot!) – Decoy
It really didn’t take long to realize that this is a top-tier network streamer. I don’t remember the last time I went through so many tracks for a review on a single piece of audio equipment. So much that I actually forgot to eat, which will help me fit into my suit for a wedding in a couple weeks (Win-Win). With the sMS-200, I experienced familiar tracks in a whole new light and I don’t believe I’ve heard the recordings sound this natural, with so much composure, while still maintaining a musicality and impact that aligns with artistic intent. It is truly a remarkable achievement.
The SOtM sMS-200 is effortless in conveying even the most complex and busiest tracks. Layering and separation is done elegantly and in proper fashion. Every single recording, even poor ones, sounded natural and coherent. I couldn’t find any glaring faults from this NAA at all. Perhaps it lacks a bit of that “high-energy” sound but that type of signature gets old and fatiguing. It’s really difficult to pick out faults when this has been the best I’ve heard many my test tracks. Other streaming devices tend to color the sound in one way or another or have a more manufactured/artificial “hi-fi” sound. The greatest strength of the sMS-200 is that it maintains integrity and remains tonally accurate throughout, no matter what you throw at it. That was a theme for all my listening sessions.
After hours upon hours of sheer musical enjoyment from this system, this is the best network audio adapter/streamer I’ve heard on my reference listening system. SOtM is constantly pushing the envelope in high fidelity audio and I can’t wait to listen to their future offerings. At this price point, the SOtM sMS-200 is by far the most sincere, pure, and transparent NAA we’ve ever had the pleasure of testing. Needless to say, the SOtM sMS-200 has earned a spot in our reference system. If you’re interested in more of SOtM’s products, Crux Audio carries their entire line. Check them out!
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Another interesting review! Great stuff.
Out of interest what power supply did you use for the W4S Recovery when comparing the PC > RUR > DAC vs the NAA > DAC?
I was using the stock W4S Recovery supply the entire time.
Another thought provoking review Jay. It seems that the pace of NAA progress is not abating.
And also leads to a hundred questions. Here's my top few:
1. How does the LPS-1 compare with this SOtM battery model?
2. Is the 7N Silver DC cable option worth it? (Some sceptics say 7N silver is not even possible, or at least is not measurable to confirm if it's possible).
3. I think you have a prototype of the SMS-200 Ultra with the super clock? How does that fit in in terms of proportional increases in SQ?
4. And does the Ultra change the importance of ethernet cable and further USB condintioners like the Wired Recovery?
That will do for now :-)
Hey Richard,
1. Unfortunately I actually didn't get a chance to power the sMS-200 with the LPS-1 but from what I've gathered, you'll get more energy and soundstage with the LPS-1 and a more coherent and natural sound with the battery. Name of the game is impedance so even with the best battery, it probably won't outperform something like a Paul Hynes SR7 which have floating outputs and an ultra-low output impedance (forgot exact measurement).
2. The demo I received did not come with the silver cable but just from experience, you'll probably get more detail and speed and trade a bit of warmth for that. I'll be posting a deal soon that SOtM's offering for a limited time.
3. I do not have the Ultra but from what I'm gathering...it's a worthwhile upgrade. SOtM makes their own clock boards and it's supposedly one of the best in the world right now. I think each of those super clock boards are $700 so...keep that in mind.
4. I'm currently trying out cables from a few other brands and I'm pretty dam sure the ethernet cable will always matter. It really is the bottleneck of most networked systems. Each and every one of them improves on the cheap ones, especially the CAT5 stuff. After hearing what a good ethernet cable could do, I'm just disgusted I didn't upgrade sooner. Spent so much money on the other stuff.
5. USB conditioners didn't really change my microRendu much (it does a great job on its own). The sMS-200 on the other hand will probably benefit from one, not sure about Ultra.
Hi Jay,
Many thanks for this review! I have a PPA V3 USB card with LPS-1, would you consider to replace it with SoTM 200 + LPS-1?
Thanks,
Tom