0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 36318 times.
Can jitter really be considered noise or compared to noise?I guess it depends upon how you define noise.I think of jitter as skewing the time domain.I think of noise as extra information that shouldn't be there.Perhaps the ear is more sensitive to time smear than noise.
16/44.1 verses 24/96 files for your listening pleasure:http://www.soundkeeperrecordings.com/format.htm
We sit down, with our mature adult ears, that have a lopped off high frequency response, and advancing tinnitus, and listen for jitter, bit depth and sample rate anomalies of noise laden (see above) recordings.
Yes but can you tell the difference when you don't know which one is being played? That's a different matter.Darren
I'm no golden ear - it's pretty simple to hear it if you stop fooling yourself and just leave pre-conceived notions behind.
To more fully satisfy myself that it's the technology, and not the mastering as some try to puffer up and excuse Redbook for,
All you need is about $200.00 to have an experiment for yourself. Buy an Oppo player and maybe 3 DVD-A's from original analog masters (there is plenty out there pre-1980). That's it, you're hooked - and will realize as it is a DAD it should be plagued by the same issue of jitter as CD (on the same machine, in particular).....but you won't care as it's the format, and not at all jitter
Either way, aren't you jumping to a conclusion about the CD format itself a bit hastily? I believe quality of mastering is more fundamental than anything in the domestic replay chain, and not an excuse at all. Finally, this view on CD versus hi rez is based on well documented blind listening experiments. I have subjective experiences too (different to yours) but I've come to feel they don't prove much. The music industry loves peddling hi-rez formats as audibly better, but I think only because they have more DRM!I'm not trying to prove you wrong, because I can't prove a negative. But personally I feel you or someone else needs to come up with more convincing evidence or argument.
Sooo, still no definitive answer on the "noise vs. primary signal" question yet? This is elemental to Ethan's claims. However, if there is more to it than noise levels we're right back to jitteradication again.
If the artifacts or performance gains between whatever medium are far below the level of music, or beneath the noise floor present on the recording, then it's a moot point. It's purely an academic discussion.
If the artifacts or performance gains between whatever medium are far below the level of music, or beneath the noise floor present on the recording, then it's a moot point. It's purely an academic discussion. This is what Ethan keeps referring to.
So what do you all say - sound like a plan?
I don't think my point as been addressed very well.I don't think jitter can be compared to noise. It is not noise, but a smearing of time.I don't really have an opinion on whether one can hear jitter. My system has way too many flaws to even think about jitter yet.I am also not a signal processing expert.However, from a layman, it just seems that noise and jitter are completely different things.They are orthogonal distortions.Look here. http://www.stereophile.com/reference/193jitter/index.htmlScroll down to Image A vs Image B.
I don't think my point as been addressed very well.I don't think jitter can be compared to noise. It is not noise, but a smearing of time.