Back in May 2014, I reviewed NAD’s Masters Series M50 Digital Music Player ($2499) and M52 Digital Music Vault ($1999 with 2TB storage). At the 2017 Consumer Electronics Show, NAD announced the M50.2, which is almost identical to the original M50 but now incorporates two 2TB hard disks, arranged as a 2TB RAID array, to ensure data integrity, and adds TosLink and coaxial digital inputs, Bluetooth with aptX for streaming music from a smartphone or tablet, and two single-ended analog inputsall for $3999, or $499 less than the combined cost of the two earlier products. Like the M50, the M50.2 offers WiFi and Ethernet connectivity, and has a CD drive, accessible via a slot on the front panel under the color TFT touchscreen, that can be used to play CDs, or rip them as FLAC, WAV, or high-bit-rate MP3 files.
The M50.2 will play files with bit depths of 16 or 24, and with sample rates up to 192kHz. DSD playback is promised by the end of this year. There are no analog outputs, but the digital outputs include HDMI, AES/EBU, and optical and coaxial S/PDIF. Playback and control of the files stored on the M50.2’s hard drive can be either via the touchscreen, which displays the album cover and metadata, or via the BluOS app running on a tablet or PC. (Android and iOS devices are supported, and the app is available for Windows and OS X.) The M50.2 will integrate with third-party control systemsControl4, Crestron, RTIto allow it to be integrated with smart homes. It can also be a Roon endpoint, as all BluOS devices are Roon Ready.
NAD called the M50 a “software-defined product,” and the same is true of the M50.2, which is also based on an ARM processor. According to an e-mail from Greg Stidsen, NAD’s director of technology and product planning:
“Conceptually, the M50.2 is meant to replace a computer and NAS for what’s been known as ‘computer audio.’ While computer audio can be made to play high-rez music well enough, it does not give the same attention to sonic detail as a dedicated device that integrates these functions and focuses solely on music storage and playback. And if you’re not a computer geek it can be very difficult and frustrating to setup and maintain a competent computer based system.
“From a hardware point of view, BluOS is tightly integrated with the hardware platform, meaning we use our own custom drivers to control all aspects of the signal chain. We do not include a DAC in the belief that most customers at this level have a strong favorite amongst the many fine DACs available. More and more amplifiers are also including high-performance DACs (certainly true at NAD) so we felt an internal DAC would only add cost and make people pay for something they may not use.”
Stidsen offered these thoughts on the M50.2’s construction: “Internally we have paid special attention to circuit layout, which is so critical with high-speed digital circuits. Multi-layer printed circuit boards with large ground planes keep the signal very clean . . . [with] high-quality clocks and quiet and stable power supplies.”
Setup
I connected the M50.2 to AC power and my network router and switched it on with the rear-panel switch. An icon for the NAD, labeled “m502.0a13,” appeared on my laptop’s screen, but the button to the left of the M50.2’s front panel flashed alternately red and green to let me know that the firmware was being upgraded. Once it had finished downloading the new version, the M50.2 rebooted itself and I could load music into its internal storage. This was as simple as dragging’n’dropping the files from my iTunes and hi-rez libraries into the “m502.0a13″‘s “shared/Music” folder, and indexing them using the free BluOS music-management app I’d downloaded to my iPad mini.
Almost all the time I had the M50.2 in my system, I used it either as a file player or to stream files from Tidal HiFi, using the NAD’s S/PDIF output. (Setting up the M50.2 to access my Tidal account was as simple as entering my username and password in the iPad BluOS app.) The app offers a volume control, but I used the M50.2 set to a fixed output and adjusted playback level with the volume controls on my Ayre Acoustics QX-5 Twenty and PS Audio PerfectWave DirectStream DACs. (The M50.2 also offers choices for equalizing loudness: Track Gain, Album Gain, and Smart Gain.) I used the drive to rip some CDs to WAV or FLAC filesI’m slowly working my way through converting my several thousand CDs to digital filesand experimented with the M50.2’s analog inputs (see “Measurements” sidebar).
The BluOS app’s screen shows when an MQA file is being played.