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    Schiit Syn - Analog Extracted Surround Sound

     

     

        

        Audio: Listen to this article.

     

     

     

    Schiit Audio creates products others may not envision, naming them after Norse mythological figures.

     

    "What is Syn?
    Syn, in Norse mythology, is a goddess associated with defensive refusal. And we’re defensively refusing to participate in the nervosa game known as standards-based surround.”

     

    syn1-700x300.jpg

     

    Norse Goddess Syn: Guardian of Frigg’s Hall and Goddess of Justice

     


    syn-main-1920-2.jpgSyn is a surround sound extractor providing up to 5.1 outputs from the ambient information naturally contained in stereo audio. The Syn does not operate on Dolby ATMOS or other digitally encoded formats. It's Analog, BABY! 

     

    The FAQ on the Schiit Syn product page is worth reading to understand their vibe.

     

    https://www.schiit.com/products/syn

     

    Schiit talks about their perceived problems with ATMOS and the like.  Yet, you still need to set up a five-channel amp and place up to six speakers for Syn in full glory. This is over-marketing.   

     

     


    The core hardware of my ATMOS 7.1.4 system is perfect for auditioning the Syn.  I used the SYN in parallel with the MOTU 24ao to the Emotiva XPA-11 amp feeding the Dynaudio Emit speakers.  The Emotiva has switchable inputs that nicely accommodate this hardware.  

     

    It's not instant switching. Get a footstool, power off the amp, grab a flashlight to find the one pushbutton and three switches to toggle, then power on the amp.  

     

    IMG_2399.jpg pasted-movie.jpg

     

     

     

    I use Audirvana Studio with the Audirvana iPhone Remote to play local 2-channel music on my Mac mini when using the Syn.  Audirvana is another Goldilocks product with a just-right mix of features.  The user interface is clean, modern, and fast.  It has excellent abilities in managing the audio playback chain.


    Dialing in the Syn, for my tastes, was a fun little exercise, knobs to spin, listening to do. You can tune it differently for any music or mood. This is not an audiophile nervosa problem. It gives you the ability to fit the moment.  The center channel is essential for vocal reproduction, and dialing it in was easy.  Setting the surround levels took me some more time.  I had to feel my way into my selected levels.  Listening to live classical music recordings got me close to the final levels I liked.  I have not made any adjustments after my initial setup.  I have started experimenting with small ensemble music to enhance the feeling of space and the room.  The Syn does not force anything. You have complete control.


    The Syn has a headphone output that I am just starting to enjoy. My primary headphones are the Meze 109 Pro's.  The headphone amp in the SYN drives the 109's with no issues. The pairing of the Syn and the 109's is clean and detailed, with a balanced musical signature.  I found it hard to work and listen as I am almost always drawn into the music first.

     

    The Syn is a device that looks backward into the world of existing music and today's latest., expanding our musical experience into surround/immersive audio. I know others have done similar things before, but the Schiit Syn is a perfect way to simplify the process.

     

    Over the last 18 months, I have been concentrating on ATMOS system development; listening to the Syn and re-visiting music in my library in 5.1 is an eye-opener!

     

    The Syn is very flexible to configure and grow with. I would first add a center channel to improve vocals and space. A Sub-woofer for some bottom-end enhancement is next. And finally, bring in a pair of surround speakers. This is a very “Audiophile” piece of equipment!  

     

    The Syn is an advanced DAC/pre-amp/headphone-amp you can grow with.  You can dial in different presentations to fit your ear and your heart. The Syn has multiple inputs, and I am using the analog to bring a CD Player into my ATMOS system.  I got two Teac PD-501HR units on closeout a couple of years ago and am now using both.
     

    This may sound silly.  I am getting more and more addicted to immersive audio.  The Schiit Syn elevates the playback of 2-channel music into my new nirvana. And that is good! I love using the Syn to demonstrate this experience and slowly dial it back to good old 2-channel.  This demos the immersive experience in the best way I have found.

     

    Listening to the system is a joy.  Two of my favorite test albums are Acoustic Alchemy: Reference Point and BT:  Electronic Opus.

     

    eectronci opus.jpg alchemy.jpg

     

     

    With the Syn in 5.1, Reference Point feels almost holographic, and Electronic Opus is a dynamic ride into BT’s world of EDM and more.  Now, I cannot give all the Kudos to the Syn; the Emotiva and the Emits are the real core here, but as a 5.1 team, they take the Gold.


    I feel a significant loss when I dial the Syn back to 2-channel.  “Please, Sir, may I have some more?”


    There are a couple of niggles running the Syn.  The Remote is tiny, and the labels are cryptic.  One issue with the system design is that the Preamp volume control is unavailable on the USB, so you have to use the remote—a throwback.  The Syn is too small and light for all those cables.  I use a doorstop on top of it.

     

    The real question is if I would build a 5.1 system around the Syn.  Now that I have had time with it, YES, I would.  It would be fun to try to make something with all Schiit Electronics.  Speakers would be an exciting challenge.


     

    Schiit Syn (direct) $399 (link)


    Bob's “Less Cash” Award!


     




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    Thanks for the article @bobfa! I'm so glad you spent a lot of time with the Schiit Syn and really pulled the best experience out of it, as it was intended. I talked to Jason at Schiit about this product when it came out and I struggled to find a way to make it work in my system. Sometimes products are square pegs for round holes. In my system this was the case, but in yours I know it's a fantastic fit. Based on your text messages to me over the last couple months, I'm pretty sure you'd pay twice the price for this thing :~)

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    Thanks Chris!

     

    The Syn is a lot of fun!  I have been testing different ways of feeding music to it.

     

    IMG_2423.jpeg

     

    The two latest methods are using the  Logitech Transporter with the Modwright Tube upgrades to the analog inputs on the Syn.  The second is with a long USB-C cable from any of my USB-C Apple Devices, Mac, iPad, iPhone.

     

    The Tube stage on the Transporter is great, and  its digital outputs are good.  Using an iPad and Apple Music very enlightening.  

     

    Here is a four track playlist that demos ATMOS masters and non-ATMOS masters.  USB out of most anything Apple to the SYN in 2-Channel.  (Oh and also interesting on Sonos ERA300)

     

    https://music.apple.com/us/playlist/bobfa-atmos-vs-non-atmos/pl.u-BNA66l6tp4DNb

     

     

    I have started moving the gear for the ATMOS system to make it simpler to work on and listen to. Right now there are speaker cables everywhere!  I am also auditioning  a couple of AudioQuest power conditioners.

     

    RJF

     

     

     

     

     

     

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    Does the Schiit Syn do something similar -- or something different -- than what 5.1 (and higher) AVRs do when you hit the fake surround setting?

     

    This is not at all a criticism. I'm genuinely interested in whether there's a difference, and if there is, am I better off with this Schiit (sorry!) or with my AVR if I want to experience good surround sound off of a stereo analog recording.  

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    a new spin on an old idea, among others the Phase Linear Ambience circuit and Radio Shack Quatravox. As above, not a criticism, just an observation.

     

     

    AMBIENCE CONTROL CIRCUIT

    Ambience Circuit
    With the Phase Linear 2000 you will be able to add an additional dimen¬sion to your music Ambience. The Phase Linear 2000 enables you to recover ambience and thereby add much of the natural acoustics of the concert hüll to home listening. We think you will be amazed at how much music you were missing with a conventional preamplifier or a receiver in the normal stereo mode. The Ambience Circuit may be used with either two or four speakers or it may be defeated with a switch an the front panel.

    AMBIENCE: This feature makes music listening more enjoyable. It can be used to enhance listening realism by adding an approximation of the natural reverberent acoustics of the concert hall. It adds music material which can't be heard in conventional preamplifiers.

     

     

    Quatravox was the name of Realistic's synthesized four-channel output version of quadraphonic sound, which used Hafler circuitry to reproduce ambient sounds recorded by the microphones 180° out-of-phase with the intended recording (sounds recorded from opposite the microphone from the performers, i.e., studio echo, audience noise, etc.) and play them back through the rear loudspeakers out-of-phase with the main loudspeakers. The effect is a greater degree of separation that stereo sound, as the listener is able to hear echoes, applause, and other ambient sounds from behind (as opposed to in-front and thus out-of-phase with the main speakers and inaudible), even with stereo recordings. However, this degree of separation is not as great or as flexible as that of truly discrete quadraphonic sound.

     

     

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    On 12/14/2023 at 2:00 PM, USAudio said:

    My Outlaw Audio 1050 receiver was pushing 20 years old, so it was time for an upgrade...

     

    While researching separate surround processors I noticed the Syn and decided to give it a go, along with a Monolith multichannel amp.  The Syn offered a surprisingly good 5.1 surround experience with movies, but what was most surprising was how great it sounded with music!  

     

    Just to do my due diligence I also gave the separate surround processor a go, but honestly the surround experience wasn't any better (albeit in my simple 5.1 system) and the Syn was much better with music.  So the surround processor went back and the Syn is staying.  

     

    The Syn is more of an audiophile product and I'm more of an audiophile than a videophile so YMMV, but if you you have a 5.1 system you might consider giving the Syn a try, you might be as pleasantly surprised as I was!

    I have not tried the SYN in a video system I am glad you could do some comparisons!    I grabbed an older set of Boston Acoustics 5.1 speakers and a 6-channel amp from the used room at my local audio store to test the SYN and video.  

     

     

     

     

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    On 12/16/2023 at 12:14 PM, bobfa said:

    I have not tried the SYN in a video system I am glad you could do some comparisons!    I grabbed an older set of Boston Acoustics 5.1 speakers and a 6-channel amp from the used room at my local audio store to test the SYN and video.  

     

     

     

     

     

    Bob - Did I stump you with my question? 

     

    Where I wrote:

    >Does the Schiit Syn do something similar -- or something different -- than what 5.1 (and higher) AVRs do when you hit the fake >surround setting?

     

    It seems like a basic question, no?

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    9 minutes ago, garrardguy60 said:

     

    Bob - Did I stump you with my question? 

     

    Where I wrote:

    >Does the Schiit Syn do something similar -- or something different -- than what 5.1 (and higher) AVRs do when you hit the fake >surround setting?

     

    It seems like a basic question, no?

     

    Perhaps your question is a bit vague, using the term "similar." Not sure. I'd say very different from a technique standpoint and not sure about the final output differences. 

     

    According to Schiit:

     

    Developed Through Listening

     

    Syn isn’t like any other surround processor. It’s not digital. It supports no standard. Its all-analog processing doesn’t use any steering. It was developed by producing a simple matrix prototype, then tweaking it with analog computing techniques until it provided enjoyable, realistic results. This meant the development of two exclusive controls—Width and Presence—as well as specific headphone shaping and matrix cross-mixing.

     

     

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    I cannot say what it does compared to AVRs as I do not have any AVRs to play with. 

     

    Not Stumped, just not any way to compare here in my realm.  I am not investing in that hardware.

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