Cambridge Audio 740C review

384kHz upsampling for £500? You'd better believe it...

TechRadar Verdict

A CD player and upsampling DAC in one, the 740C is a particularly handy model with good ergonomics and build - but somehow its sound failed to impress our listening panel, despite a good showing on its own

Pros

  • +

    Great value

    Well made

Cons

  • -

    Sound not to all tastes

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Cambridge Audio surely has the most technologically equipped player in its class. It's the only one to offer 384kHz upsampling - indeed, few players at any price offer such a feature.

Cambridge introduced this a year or so ago in the Azur 840C player, and cajoled it into the cheaper 740C thanks to a few small economies in the DAC department and the omission of balanced output.

The Cambridge contender achieves another near-faultless performance in the lab, and by a narrow margin the best in the group. Distortion once again hovers around the measurement limit, while the jitter figure of 120ps is an estimated worst case - real performance is almost certainly even better, but it's hard to be sure.

The effect of the Anagram filter is seen in the near-22kHz attenuation, which is a better figure than most (though still not quite as rapid as we would like), and also in the general cleanliness of the noise spectrum, both with and without the presence of an audio signal. It's typical to see a few minute spikes sticking up even in the spectrum of a good player, but here there are none visible even down to -120dB, and the ultrasonic band is exceptionally clean too. There's certainly nothing obvious here to justify the criticisms made of the player by our panellists.

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