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Quote from: Ethan Winer on 15 Mar 2008, 03:58 pmI know it angers - or at least irritates - some people to be told they can't possibly be hearing a change when they swap digital cables etc. As it should.
I know it angers - or at least irritates - some people to be told they can't possibly be hearing a change when they swap digital cables etc.
Quote from: Double Ugly on 15 Mar 2008, 04:06 pmQuote from: Ethan Winer on 15 Mar 2008, 03:58 pmI know it angers - or at least irritates - some people to be told they can't possibly be hearing a change when they swap digital cables etc. As it should.Really? I think it's a bit of a shame you feel that way. If you can actually hear differences it's pretty easy to prove with a blind test, and then you could shut up the skeptics. If you can't, and you just imagined then, so what? What's the shame in that? As long as you enjoy your system and your favorite digital cables, what difference does it make?
You assume too much.
The primary participants have determined this thread has run its course, and rightly so IMHO. If you wish to begin a new thread in which you divulge your methods of determining my skepticism or lack thereof, please do so, but I'd prefer the remainder of this thread not morph into a new topic.
I may be "smoking crack" as one of my teenaged brother-in-laws likes to say, but I have no shame in being proven wrong.
Quote from: Double Ugly on 15 Mar 2008, 06:52 pmYou assume too much.Sorry - I didn't realize I was assuming anything.
Eric Benjamin and Benjamin Gannon, "Theoretical and Audible Effects of Jitter on Digital Audio Quality", Pre-print 4826 of the 105th AES Convention, San Francisco, September 1998. This paper concluded that the threshold of audibility of jitter on normal music signals is around 20nS (that's 20,000pS - rather more than 71pS
Quote from: Geardaddy on 16 Mar 2008, 01:46 pmEric Benjamin and Benjamin Gannon, "Theoretical and Audible Effects of Jitter on Digital Audio Quality", Pre-print 4826 of the 105th AES Convention, San Francisco, September 1998. This paper concluded that the threshold of audibility of jitter on normal music signals is around 20nS (that's 20,000pS - rather more than 71pS Thanks for posting that link. I bought the paper yesterday and you are correct - it concluded that even with the cheapest DVD players they tested - and this was ten years ago in 1998 - the jitter was well below the threshold anyone was able to hear. I also found a similar 2005 paper from another technical journal that concluded the same based on extensive testing.This is not to say that people don't hear differences when swapping digital cables or A/D/A converters and word clocks. But if they do hear a difference, it's not due to reduced jitter.Again, I agree with Pat and Bruno Putzeys and all the other competent EE's out there that aim to make their specs as good as possible. To do otherwise is just lazy, unless it can substantially reduce cost to the consumer while still preserving "good enough not to matter" fidelity.--Ethan
What's the point of good specs if you can't hear the benefit? It surely is cheaper to "not sweat it".
This is not to say that people don't hear differences when swapping digital cables or A/D/A converters and word clocks. But if they do hear a difference, it's not due to reduced jitter.