1767 Rose Petal Lane
Castle Rock Colorado 80109
720 308 4000 Phone
866 245 6601 Fax
The Music Vault N.A.S.
N.A.S. Is a three letter acronym for Network Addressable
Storage Device.
Music Vault means a safe place to store your music.
Sound Science has found the most user friendly
way to assemble a state of the art music server.
You can use a Squeeze Box 3, Duet and/or Transporter with
the Music Vault. You can have up to 9 of them wirelessly on a
Wireless Router or up to 256 of them on a wired network.
Together they form a complete fully operational Music Server.
The Music Vault has the latest version of SqueezeCenter
resident on it. In addition the Music Vault has a built in CD Drive
which will automatically "rip" your CD to the hard drive and eject it
when it is done copying it
When you order your Music Vault you can specify whether you
want to save your CDs as Wave files, FLAC files or MP3s.
We Ship the Music Vault all over the World.
We accept Paypal and all major credit cards.

Dimension: 20,1cm (W) x 26,9cm (H) x
33,5cm (D) - 8" (W) x 11" (H) x 13 3/16 "
(D)
You can use it like any other network
addressable hard drive but with the latest
version of SqueezeCenter resident on it,
you can turn off all the computers on the
network and still use your Squeezebox ,
Duet or Transporter.
The Music Vault also has a built in wireless
technology that can operate stand alone
with your Squeezebox, Duet or
Transporter!!!
The Music Vault 500 comes with 500
gigabytes of storage which will hold 1000
CDs
The Music Vault 1,000 comes with 1,000
gigabytes of storage which will hold 2000
CDs
Music Vaults are availabe with up to 3
Terabytes of storage.
Introductory pricing is $879.95 for The
Music Vault 500 with 500 Gigabytes of
Storage which holds 1000 CDs
Out side of the United States the Music
Vault 500 is $1,041 shipped - all fees
included.
Introductory pricing is $1119.95 for The
Music Vault 1000 with a terabyte.of
Storage which holds 2000 CDs
Out side of the United States the Music
Vault 1000 is $1,282 shipped all fees
included.
SqueezeBox3 plus the Music Vault with 500
Gig of Storage for $1179.95
Duet with Music Vault 1000 $1519.95
Transporter with 1 Terrabyte of Storage for
$2,919.95
If you don't have a home network setup or
a personal computer you can use
The Music Vault N.A.S. wirelessly with
your Squeezebox, Duet or Transporter and
turn them into a stand alone music server.

Check out these comments and pictures from the 6 Moons
review of the Modwright vacuum tube modified Transporter
with the Music Vault as the Music Server.
From the 6 Moons Review of the Modwright Transporter and the Music Vault.
" Apparently, Neal's software/hardware combo to rip to his Vault's hard-drive, then streaming that data wirelessly to the
Transporter was as good as the world's best dedicated transport. This won't make me popular with Esoteric or anyone
else still committed to designing and fabricating such devices (very few are left). Yet I cannot deny my ears' evidence.
Nor am I suggesting that such results are inherent in the computer audio equation. Just running any loaded-for-bear
PC for audio purposes will likely not give equivalent results."
Introductory pricing is $1120
Also from the review in 6 moons:
"Has that time finally arrived so us old-timers must get off our resistant arses, down with the hipsters and on with da
future? Therein lies the tale. Lest you think that a music server requires a home network, think again. Neal Van Berg's
MusicVault with 500GB or 1TB of storage is a stand-alone server with CD/DVD drive that will auto rip your CDs to hard
drive as FLAC files and arrives preloaded with the latest version of Slimserver. It communicates with your Transporter
wirelessly or via hardwired Ethernet link without setup hassles. And the Music Vault isn't a space hog. It of course also
works with the Squeezebox or Roku Sound Bridge. Hip hip hurray? " and the new Duet!!!!!
More from the 6 Moons review:
While my Vault loaner admittedly is not entirely your usual computer -- everything non-essential to ripping and storing
music files has been stripped and ripped out, including loading its operating system to USB stick -- it does use an
apparently quite ordinary 52-times hi-speed CD/ROM drive. By comparison, the top-line TEAC VRDS-NEO in my NWO
clocks in at $6,000 on the OEM price sheet - with minimum order quantities of 50. It's the arguably most drastic
juxtaposition one could make. Bottom line, the NWO 3.0-GO clocks in at $30,000, the ModWrighted Transporter + 1TB
Music Vault at about $5,000, combined. (MacBooks with 1/5th the storage capacity start out at $1,100 to compare in
price to the Vault). Then consider the small print. The NWO can only play whatever disc is loaded (though it's
compatible with DVD/A + V and SACD). The Transporter/Vault combo can play up to approximately 2,200 CDs stored
as FLAC files without ever getting up (actual figure depends on lengths of individual CDs of course).

