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Steps to reduce jitter -Reduce vibrations to your component. Use a rack with spikes and place each shelf on spikes. Lots of shelves, vibration reducing components available. Use a power conditioner or make sure power is clean of spikes/noise etc. Balanced power conditioner makes quite a bit of differenceA component with good power supply makes the best of the oscillator/clock in the device. 50% of the cost of the pricey Halcro amp goes into designing a power factor corrected power supply for it. After market power cords help improve dynamic demand of current of the device. These dont have to be pricey. Simple DIY designs make quite a bit of differenceIn the case of CD/DVD players, a clean CD with some anti-glare spray helps the laser track efficiently reducing too much servo tracking and in turn putting more demands on the power supply, which will affect the whole system and jitter.With computer based play back, it is much easier to isolate the audio output device than to use the builtin soundcard. Examples would be USB/Firewire/Network(like Squeezebox) sound cards/devices. It will be easier to get a power supply to these devices than to the whole computer.Here is my system -Cryoed Hubbell wall outlet -> Empirical Audio power cord -> Furman Power Factor Pro -> Black Sand Violet power cord -> Blue Circel MR1200 Balanced Power conditioner -> Modded SB3 with modded Elpac power supply -> Zu Ash -> Behringer SRC2496 (with Vh Audio power cord) -> Sound Professionals Glass Toslink -> Panasonic XR55 --- (bi amp) ---> Silverline Sonatina speakers. My system is all digital till the speakers. Any change in the above setup I immediately notice a difference. So I am used to hearing the effects of jitter.
ok, that means you can hear the effects of jitter. You are an audiophile with golden ears
I say jitter is more than noise, ergo adding noise to an otherwise "clean" file won't answer the question. Others in this thread have echoed these thoughts.
Ethan, I notice a change or softening of your stance. Now you need to talk about jitter in the actual terms it is measured i.e peak-to-peak variation in time/picoseconds (just ignoring the spectrum for simplicity sake).
If you use this parameter, most CD/DVD players under $1K have very high jitter.
If you do not recognise these, you are doing a disservice or misleading audiophiles here.
Here is my system - Cryoed Hubbell wall outlet
Steps to reduce jitter -Reduce vibrations to your component. Use a rack with spikes and place each shelf on spikes. Lots of shelves, vibration reducing components available. Use a power conditioner or make sure power is clean of spikes/noise etc. Balanced power conditioner makes quite a bit of differenceA component with good power supply makes the best of the oscillator/clock in the device. 50% of the cost of the pricey Halcro amp goes into designing a power factor corrected power supply for it. After market power cords help improve dynamic demand of current of the device. These dont have to be pricey. Simple DIY designs make quite a bit of differenceIn the case of CD/DVD players, a clean CD with some anti-glare spray helps the laser track efficiently reducing too much servo tracking and in turn putting more demands on the power supply, which will affect the whole system and jitter.With computer based play back, it is much easier to isolate the audio output device than to use the builtin soundcard. Examples would be USB/Firewire/Network(like Squeezebox) sound cards/devices. It will be easier to get a power supply to these devices than to the whole computer.
I wholly agree that # of votes does not equate to degree of correctness. This is one of the most difficult lessons in our pursuit and one of the sociological phenomena referenced above.I base my opinion on my experience, what I've heard, what is so commonly wrong with digital sound, and how good my two sources are now. Yes I know there are other design concerns. What I've heard wrong with so much digital before is cleaned up so much that it seems there has to be more to it than signal/noise ratios. Bad sounding digital can have very low noise levels. Could *something else* be the culprit? Sure, maybe "jitter" is the catch-all scapegoat and there's some other pixie dust we're all missing.
I kinda have to agree. Mind you, I do have a Panny 55 in my own modest HT setup and i love it, but it would not make the cut in my 2 channel rig. It next to my Red Wine Sig 30.2 ........ sorry, not even remotely close in the clean signal dept.
Quote from: AphileEarlyAdopter on 12 Mar 2008, 05:41 pmok, that means you can hear the effects of jitter. You are an audiophile with golden ears Is that an insult? FWIW I have done a double blind test with transports and it indicated jitter is audible.It was an SB3 vs a Monarchy CLD-M401 CD transport, both going via coax S/PDIF into an old, not particularly jitter busting DAC. The SB3 was chosen as better 4 times out 4, despite sighted impressions (short or long term) seeming to be the opposite.The negative is that we only did 4 rounds, and there is 1 in 8 chance of getting a 4/4 (one way or the other) by pure chance anyway. The positive is that the differences sounded pretty clear blind and choosing didn't seem difficult or agonising. The coax cable, DAC and rest of system was identical, and the DAC had a switchable input so quick A/B was possible. The person doing the switching didn't know which transport corresponded to which switch, he didn't let me know with which input he started each round and I stated my preference as "the first one" or "the second one" based on his starting choice each round. I could switch back and forth as much as I liked until I made a decision. Other than the number of listens, it was a good double blind test.I hope this report is of help to the discussion. The DAC used was venerable so it was a good jitter test.It doesn't get us closer to what level of jitter is audible though. It doesn't really speak about the claims of modern DAC manufacturers that their DACs are in effect immune from jitter. I'm open-minded about that.Darren
The test is limited in that it simulates only a very specific type of jitter - jitter with a spectrum concentrated at one frequency (100 Hz in the example I gave). That's supposed to be easier to hear than the effects of than broad-spectrum jitter. It's also highly data correlated (in a kind of trivial sense) - that should also make it easier to hear. Picking a test-tone that's near the most sensitive part of the human hearing range will enhance audibility, and in general effects like this are much easier to hear with pure tones (because all the complex stuff going on in music tends to mask these things). So there are three effects all going in the direction of making the jitter more audible, and so this test might significantly overestimate the audibility of normal jitter - but it still seems worth doing since it's so simple.
Please read this article, if you have not done so already -http://www.stereophile.com/features/368/
One simple test to establish a threshold of jitter audibility is as follows ... start with pure tone (say a 1 kHz sine wave). Now add side bands to that
Quote from: opaqueice on 13 Mar 2008, 11:47 amOne simple test to establish a threshold of jitter audibility is as follows ... start with pure tone (say a 1 kHz sine wave). Now add side bands to thatYes, and this is exactly what I proposed about 137 pages back.
It is well known that jitter manifests as non-harmonic sidebands, so the real issue is how far below the music such artifacts must be before we can consider them insignificant. This is trivial to test, and I'm willing to go one better (in favor of jitter believers) than your proposal to add correlated side bands. I propose adding the nastiest sounding treble-weighted noise I can concoct at varying levels below music and low frequency test tones. This will make the artifacts as obvious as possible, and then we'll all know how soft is soft enough. If nobody can hear noise that sounds like gears grinding when it's 80-odd dB below the music, then we'll have disproved an entire category of beliefs such as the audibility of capacitor distortion, jitter, dither and ultra-high bit depths, and more.