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I’m getting older, wiser, and frankly tired of having to undo the misinformation out there regarding USB Audio.In this thread, I will explain why the USB cable that connects your source (PC or other) to your DAC shouldn’t matter, as long as it is of reasonable quality and is undamaged.
Just curious who already knows this: Where is the audio data “clock” coming from?
On the same subject: if the USB cable doesn't matter, is a plain-Jane USB cable good enough/not as bad as people say?
Isn't the clock in the digital to analog converter? So therefore it's after the USB cable.Although I realize that the clock can be separate from the D/A converter, I think it's integral to the conversion process. But I'm no expert.
PLUS, if you’re using a USB-to-SPDIF converter such as the Cherry USB, the data is re-clocked by the DAC, which is the case for any SPDIF connected DAC, such as the Cherry 130dB+ DAC DAC 2.
Great thread!So, if a user has a USB to SPDIF converter feeding a DAC, you're saying the data is re-clocked once by the converter, and then re-clocked by the DAC? Does sending the data through multiple "re-clockings" (is that a word? ) have any negative effects on the data? Never thought that a cable would have any impact on jitter, but I don't mind spending a bit more (not more than $50) for a USB cable that I know is well constructed.
If a “plain jane” cable works, and a super fancy cable works, there will be no difference in sound quality UNLESS the equipment design is faulty.How can it be “faulty”? One way is relying on USB power without any conditioning (aka reconstruction) to run the rest of the hardware. Another is a lack of error detection, and that’s just not going to happen when using a decent USB “receiver” interface chip.
The USB interface clocks the data by way of packet requests. Therefore, any claims of “lower jitter” regarding a fancy USB cable are ludicrous.
I agree with this (though I've never tested high priced digital cables of any kind). Is there any way that there can be an error in the movement of packets through the cable? Are there digital reflections within the cable? What if there is some kind of increased resistance?
Yikes! Another usb cable discussion. Don P.
I own several USB cables ranging from $40 to $225. They all sound different and it is not subtle. They can also sound different on different DAC's. 3 years ago we did a usb cable shoot out with cables in the $40 to $600 range and the results were eye opening as there were big differences. The best sounding cable was a WW Starlight 7 Platinum which sells for $600. The worst was a $40 Pangea, it was thin, bright and not really listenable with my Luxman DAC.Anyone is welcome to come to my house in the Twin Cities and hear the differences with a Luxman and Qutest DAC.