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Picoseconds people 10x10^-12 seconds. Now if you told me nanoseconds I would be all ears but PICO!! thats just silly....No, just your response.I don't understand how any of you people can make claims about jitter not being this, that, or the other thing, without stating magnitude, frequency spectrum, or level of data-correlation.The bottom line is that depending on all of those 3 criteria, jitter can be problem in any system. Its causes are many. Anything from SPDIF, which is a joke, to CD players that stick the clock circuit in the digital filter chip. Just because some people of dubious reputation make products to address this issue is no reason to dismiss it as another "solution" looking for a problem to fix.Pat
is Robert Harely from TAS delusional with his sonic portrayal of jitter in a system?
QuotePicoseconds people 10x10^-12 seconds. Now if you told me nanoseconds I would be all ears but PICO!! thats just silly....No, just your response.I don't understand how any of you people can make claims about jitter not being this, that, or the other thing, without stating magnitude, frequency spectrum, or level of data-correlation.The bottom line is that depending on all of those 3 criteria, jitter can be problem in any system. Its causes are many. Anything from SPDIF, which is a joke, to CD players that stick the clock circuit in the digital filter chip. Just because some people of dubious reputation make products to address this issue is no reason to dismiss it as another "solution" looking for a problem to fix.PatI made no claims. So is there a duration limit at which regardless of magnitude or frequency spectrum is inaudible? Or do you claim that an large blip at 10*10^-100 seconds will be heard? What is this limit? You can always tell the people with that have financial interests from the hobby folk.
Are you sure it's only below the noise floor? The way I see jitter explained is that it distorts the proper reproduction .........
Ah, picoseconds is 10^-12, not 10^-100. Secondly, jitter is an error around where something should happen. There really is no "blip"; instead, it's a "constant" error. Can one hear jitter in the picosecond range? That, I don't know. However, it's better to at least know what jitter is and is not in order to argue effectively one way or the other. Here's a Wikipedia article about jitter:
Quote from: Daygloworange on 7 Mar 2008, 03:25 pmAre you sure it's only below the noise floor? The way I see jitter explained is that it distorts the proper reproduction .........This was my understanding as well.Bob
This is how Stereophile explains what jitter is actually doing. I'm not claiming it is the true definition, but it seems logical.Cheers
Wow, I make one innocent comment and we're up to five pages in less than a day. Quote from: Geardaddy on 6 Mar 2008, 03:00 pmis Robert Harely from TAS delusional with his sonic portrayal of jitter in a system?Yes, fer sher. As are all the other people who claim to be able to hear jitter (and dither). .. Peace.--Ethan
A whole branch of industry (building transports, reviewers and DIYers) cannot be a bunch of charlatans or deluded.
Quote from: Daygloworange This is how Stereophile explains what jitter is actually doing. I'm not claiming it is the true definition, but it seems logical.CheersDid anyone read this closely enough to see the section on impedance matching? No......probably not. Gee, I wonder who else says pretty much the same thing.But, once again, I must point out that talking about jitter and what is and is not audible is meaningless without specifying amplitude, frequency spectrum, and level of data-corrleation. Random-occurring noise is much less noticeable than jitter that is data-correlated.Pat