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Lessloss thinks two-way clock signals (out from transport to DAC AND out from DAC to transport) riding the s/pdif cable is a major problem. The clock frequencies do not mesh which further complicates things. Their solution is to have the DAC clock output via separate cable to a transport with disabled clock.
Data stream only out the transport, clock stream only in. It's an elegant solution which works quite well to my ears.
.. I've wondered about ASRC's: Wouldn't jitter/timing issues received at the ASRC chip just get remapped to a different rate (i.e. garbage-in/garbage-out)? ..Personally I hope the latest generation of soundcard/player-software combos, and also the essentially ethernet-dacs (with server software control) like the Transporter, SB3, etc will make permanent headway into the jitter-busting fight - since ethernet is pulse-transformer isolated, and since the ethernet device depends on its own clock instead of S/PDIF timing.I have no idea what the answers are - just wondering what others think.
...if you rcv a 44.1khz stream and convert it to 88.2khz. A sample value is held for 1/44100 of a second and during that time it is resampled twice to generate the 88.2khz output. Note, the clock used for output is different from the input so input clk jitter is not retransmitted...Personally, I prefer using a very good clock at the source, say in a squeezebox... main advantage with PC or devices like Squeezebox is that their electrical design is simple enough to reduce power supply related jitter. (nothing to do with ethernet etc as you seem to confuse yourself with).
Can someone point me to an informative discussion somewhere of why SPDIF sucks so bad? I'd like to read all about it.
Tell us what song you are now hearing. (Hint: it will be the one that the transport is playing.)
why do you say that?
...Personally I hope the latest generation of soundcard/player-software combos, and also the essentially ethernet-dacs (with server software control) like the Transporter, SB3, etc will make permanent headway into the jitter-busting fight - since ethernet is pulse-transformer isolated, and since the ethernet device depends on its own clock instead of S/PDIF timing...
...Actually, main advantage with PC or devices like Squeezebox is that their electrical design is simple enough to reduce power supply related jitter. (nothing to do with ethernet etc as you seem to confuse yourself with).
...I believe APhileEarlyAdopter's point is that if the SB3 is used as a transport, then it's going to have the same jitter issues as a CDT except less moving parts, servos etc, which means less electrical noise.NewBuyer, you are correct that a computer network introduces no jitter...
I didn't think jitter was a noise issue quantifiable as dB below signal, rather a timing error OF the signal.
This is how Stereophile explains what jitter is actually doing.
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.
A whole branch of industry (building transports, reviewers and DIYers) cannot be a bunch of charlatans or deluded.
I don't think anyone doubts the existence of jitter as a measurable phenomenon. The disagreement is over how important, relevant, audible it is. Building transports and DACs that attempt to address jitter doesn't have to be charlatanism, but it might be gilding a lily. Lots of businesses promote "advancements" before there's universal agreement as to their benefits.
I am going to be in Monroe for a St. Patrick's day party Saturday. I can swing over on Sunday.
Those here who believe they can discern reduced jitter are most welcome to visit me and be tested blind. I have $100 for each and every one of you who can reliably pick out the difference. I am absolutely serious. Bob? Anyone else near me in Western CT?--Ethan
Many times, companies who have engineers and owners who have such knowledge and wisdom to further the art of audio..have to keep such knowledge to themselves, as that is key and core to their capacity to create products that differentiate them from the rest of the herd. Publishing that information is a loss of leadership or position in the market. Actual loss of income. nvestigate. Ie, effort.
And are you going to send me $100 for every one who can?
How are you going to reduce the jitter? Who sets the metrics for that? Who decides whether your "jitter reduction method" is valid.
You are free to come to Texas. Bring your $100.
BTW, I can also show how digital cables affect jitter. Bring an extra $100.