Ive seen the phrase “DDSC-Digital” used to describe some circuitry in Denons surround receivers. What does it mean and why is it important?
DDSC stands for “Dynamic Discrete Surround Circuit.” Its Denons unique, high end solution to the problem of accurately processing multi-channel audio signals. Instead of the multi-purpose ICs (integrated circuits) common to most other surround decoders, Denon uses discrete, single-function circuit blocks optimized for particular functions. The first DDSC circuits were designed to accurately decode analog-based Dolby Pro Logic sources. DDSC-Digital is an all-digital system that handles Pro Logic decoding entirely in the digital domain as well as the latest Dolby Digital sources. DDSC-Digital circuits feature separate analog-to-digital converters, surround processing and signal enhancement microprocessors (using Zoran and Motorola DSP ICs), and final digital-to-analog converters — all separate and all optimized for specific applications. The benefit? Its simple — better sound!
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