What Hi-Fi (UK)

Audiolab M-DAC nano

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If you want to improve the sound of your phone or laptop on the go, there aren’t too many options. Until now our recommenda­tion would have been restricted to adding a portable USB DAC such as the Cyrus soundkey (£79) or Audioquest Dragonfly Red (£169). These are both excellent sounding devices and do their job brilliantl­y for the money, but they’re not ideal for truly portable use.

Both need a lead, meaning that you have to carry around an unwieldy combinatio­n of phone, adaptor cable and DAC. That’s quite a lot to fit in one pocket, no matter how small the DAC. However, Audiolab is offering an enticing alternativ­e with its new M-DAC nano.

The M-DAC nano is a tiny unit; it’s light too, weighing in at just 28g. Being small and light are major plus points for portabilit­y, but the nano’s biggest advantage over rivals such as the soundkey or the Dragonfly is that the connection with your device is done wirelessly, in this case by apt X Bluetooth v4.2.

This wireless link removes the need to physically tether your device to the DAC, and means that, once on the move, the nano is more convenient to use than its rivals. It can be in a different pocket to your source, for example, and positioned wherever is convenient to connect the leads from your headphones.

Audiolab even provides a faux leather belt-clip and a built-in microphone allows hands-free calls when connected to a smartphone and can also be used to work Siri or Google assistant.

While its rivals will take power from your device – reducing power reserves in the process – the nano has a built-in rechargeab­le battery, which is claimed to give eight hours use from a full two-hour charge. The DAC will power down after 10 minutes of inactivity to preserve power, and there’s also a neat wireless charging pad included in the box. 42

Audiolab is no newcomer to digital-toanalogue conversion, but it struck gold with the introducti­on of the original M-DAC. The nano is a very different device, though. Unlike its older, purely domestic brother, it uses a Cirrus Logic CS43130 DAC chip, something that’s designed for low power consumptio­n applicatio­ns. The specs make impressive reading, with the Audiolab able to up-sample the incoming signal to 32-bit/384khz (at the press of a button) before converting to analogue.

Lightweigh­t casework

Build quality is neat, though the requiremen­t for low weight means the casework doesn’t feel particular­ly substantia­l. The controls are limited to a 64-step rotary volume cog that also controls the play/pause and skip functions depending on how many times it is pressed. The button marked ‘f’ also performs multiple functions from on/off to Bluetooth pairing and changing the sampling frequency.

The nano defaults to upsampling off when you change source or your device awakes from sleep mode, which is a little frustratin­g as upsampling delivers a bolder, more spacious balance. There’s an increase in volume between the modes that favours upsampling, and battery life takes a 30 per cent hit due to the extra processing involved.

If we had doubts about the nano, they were about the effect Bluetooth may have on its sound quality. At almost £150, it has to offer a significan­t sonic upgrade from plugging the headphones straight into your device.

We use the DAC with an iphone 6S Plus and Macbook, and it doesn’t take long to realise that it offers a notably superior sound to both devices. We use a range of headphones from AKG’S Y50s and the Sennheiser Momentum 2.0s to Beyerdynam­ics’ T1s – the nano supports 8-300 ohm loads. The T1s in particular aren’t an obvious match, being pricey, domestic models, but they’re also revealing and insensitiv­e, so provide a stern load for the Audiolab to drive.

Improved bass punch

We listen to alt-j’s All This Is Yours and are impressed with the solidity of the presentati­on and the improvemen­t in bass punch and power over our source components. Not only does the nano drive our headphones louder, but it also adds a notable degree of refinement to the sound. Detail levels are good too, with the Audiolab keeping a tight leash on the various instrument­al strands through the album’s dense production.

It’s an exciting and entertaini­ng performanc­e, one that’s comparable to the likes of Audioquest’s Dragonfly Red. That’s some compliment, considerin­g the Dragonfly is hardwired to your device and the Audiolab isn’t.

If you have a good pair of wired headphones and want to improve your sound on the move, the Audiolab M-DAC nano makes a strong case. We can’t think of a similarly priced alternativ­e that is so convenient, yet so capable.

“Once on the move, the M-DAC nano is more convenient than its rivals”

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