Not sure if that is possible but I will ask Chris to comment - what DAC are you using? I do not have that issue with our BDA2 or BDA3.
james
Current DAC is dCS Debussy. I experience the problem with the original BDP-2 Juli@ card and with the IAD card. However, it problem is less severe with the IAD card. I have also experienced the problem with my Cary Audio DMC-600SE DAC.
I did not experience the problem with the DAC stage of my Cary Audio CD 306 Pro Version SACD player, nor with my Cary Audio DAC-100 which is used with my other BDP-2 in my office system.
The least offender is the Debussy. The CD306 PV is an older model (2008) whereas the DMC-600SE and DAC-100 are 2015 models. Therefore I was surprised that the newer, top-of-the-line Cary DAC would have this issue while the older CD306PV and lower line DAC-100 does not.
I have this same problem since upgrading my BDP-2 with the Bryston IAD. This has been a problem primarily with 192 and to a lesser degree with 176.4 rate files. I currently use AES-XLR out from the BDP-2 to AES-XLR in to the DAC's to the Bryston SP-3 2 channel bypass, but this issue also appears with SPDIF out/in. The DAC's I have routinely encountered this in my system include the Classe SSP-800, Bryston SP-3, AURALAC Vega, and Berkeley Alpha DAC Reference. The worst was the SSP-800 where switching from a lower sampling rate file to 176.4 or 192 rate files (or jumping from one track to another within a 176.4 or 192 file) would occasionally freeze the SSP-800 requiring a complete shut down and reboot of the processor (I sold the SSP-800 and replaced it with the Bryston SP-3 due to this behavior). The Berkeley Alpha DAC Reference has a light indicating a lock on the signal, and it takes about 1-2 seconds to show a lock on the signal when flipping from lower resolution to high resolution files or jumping between tracks on high resolution files. This was not something I encountered with the original Julia card. As much as I like the BDP-2 with the Bryston IAD, this behavior is a bit annoying.
My experiences have been similar to yours, with the exception that the IAD significantly lessened the degree of the problem. Sometimes, with the Cary DMC-600SE, when going from a 44.1k file to a 192k file, a lock could not be achieved and loud static would come from the speakers. If I stopped playback and restarted the 192k file, it would play normally.
The workaround I have been using is, when I know the next file is going to be a different rate, I pause playback for a couple of seconds as soon as the BDP-2 switches to the next song. This gives the BDP-2 time to "get itself together" for the different rate.
Most of my music files are 44.1k PCM and DSD64 and most of my playlists are music with the same sampling rate. I do have a few playlists with songs with different PCM rates as well as some playlists with songs with different rates of PCM and some DSD64 songs.