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So the question is, what do you use, and if it's "higher end" do you notice a big benefit or no?
I've only listened to one coax that I really couldn't stand. After 30 minutes or so, the Stereovox HDXV was too physically painful to listen to anymore. I finally learned firsthand what "listener fatigue" was as I'd not experienced that before.
But digital cables are simply suppose to pass 0's and 1's. As long as they get that correct it seems the cable has done its job.
But digital cables are simply suppose to pass 0's and 1's. As long as they get that correct it seems the cable has done its job....
Not quite true. Yes, a digital cable is supposed to pass 0's and 1's. But at the end of the day, a "digital system" still uses an electrical/analog signal to represent that data. Those voltages only need to be within a certain tolerance (magnitude and length) to accurately represent a 0 or 1, but when it is passed to the DAC (or even a data buffer), those 0's and 1's are analog voltages that are being passed into a series of resistors/transistors to be transformed into another set of voltages. If there ...
But at the end of the day, a "digital system" still uses an electrical/analog signal to represent that data. Those voltages only need to be within a certain tolerance (magnitude and length) to accurately represent a 0 or 1, but when it is passed to the DAC (or even a data buffer), those 0's and 1's are analog voltages that are being passed into a series of resistors/transistors to be transformed into another set of voltages. If there are variations in the magnitude of those voltages ("data jitter") or length ("timing jitter"), those variances at the input of the DAC will affect the output of the DAC.
So a digital IC does need to pass 0's and 1's, but it also needs to maintain the proper magnitude and length of the square wave that represents that data.
Well explained! Thank you!Ok, so when coming from a digital source (CD/DVD/SACD/etc) why don't we avoid the problem entirely... go to an error correcting, packet based data encapsulation scheme? TCP/IP comes to mind as a well used example. Heck, Ethernet NICs and cable are dirt cheap these days, and could handle the bandwidth without a problem. For a full digital system, this would appear to be both cheap and ideal. So what have I missed that prevents this from happening at a technical level?
Not to head the dicsussion into a completely new direction, but will a coaxial cable or an optical cable do a better job at this? I have heard that it makes little difference in short runs, but to stay away from optical in longer runs. Thanks again.
Instead, there are a set of input voltages that pass thru resisters and transisters, and get transformed to an output voltage. ...when that hits the DAC, the DAC doesn't actually care if it's a 1 or 0...it cares what the input voltages are and how long they are.
Thanks for the additional comments, Phil!Any idea if true digital amps show the same sensitivity in the same manner?
Yeah, sorry if the thread is getting hijacked, but I think it's relevant to the topic...!
Thanks for the additional comments, Phil!Quote from: PhilNYCInstead, there are a set of input voltages that pass thru resisters and transisters, and get transformed to an output voltage. ...when that hits the DAC, the DAC doesn't actually care if it's a 1 or 0...it cares what the input voltages are and how long they are.Any idea if true digital amps show the same sensitivity in the same manner?