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Quote from: AphileEarlyAdopter on 13 Mar 2008, 07:39 amPlease read this article, if you have not done so already -http://www.stereophile.com/features/368/What I see there makes no sense. The two graphs that show jitter - Figures 2 and 3 - show the sidebands at very high levels around -60 and -50 dB respectively. If the jitter really were that high it would be clearly audible and highly objectionable. I cannot accept that any CD player or any other digital system could have such high levels of artifacts, even very early players from the 1980s. At -50 that would be worse than the hiss from a pre-recorded cassette, and we all know that CDs are infinitely quieter than any cassette.The data in the Stereophile article is also wrong because the stated jitter levels for those graphs are listed as 145 picoseconds and 561 picoseconds. Contrast that with Figure 4.28 in Ken Pohlmann's book Principles of Digital Audio (4th ed.) where he shows the spectrum for 2 nanoseconds of jitter as being below -120 dB. Now, Pohlmann's example is 2 ns peak to peak, where Stereophile uses RMS. But even still, Pohlmann's jitter is four to 14 times higher than Stereophile's, yet the artifacts are 60 to 70 dB lower. So ether Pohlmann doesn't know how to measure jitter properly, or Stereopile doesn't know how to measure jitter properly. Guess who my money is on. --Ethan
Please read this article, if you have not done so already -http://www.stereophile.com/features/368/
So, your opinion is jitter manifests solely as noise artifacts without any effect on primary signal? Is this scientifically accepted? I don't know the answer.
The there is little the audio consumer can do to directly reduce the level of jitter in a transport-DAC system using an SPDIF interface. As Art stated a few pages ago,SPDIF is inherently flawed.
That works too but it's system dependent whereas Pace Car adds a really good reference clock that will slave the transport and the I2S DAC. To me I heard more details and precision with Pace car then Off ramp.
One thing I can say is this - if I start with a sine wave and add some jitter with a specified spectrum, I can just sit down and calculate precisely what that will do to the output signal.
Quote from: opaqueice on 14 Mar 2008, 04:55 amOne thing I can say is this - if I start with a sine wave and add some jitter with a specified spectrum, I can just sit down and calculate precisely what that will do to the output signal.Opaqueice, what you said in your post is based on the fact that any signal (including the example of a pure sine wave distorted by jitter) can be expressed as a sum of pure sine components. Have I got that right?Darren
Rather, we should focus on jittered tracks themselves with actual jitter levels.
So, your opinion is jitter manifests solely as noise artifacts without any effect on primary signal? Is this scientifically accepted?
Well, I don't think most hard core "audiophiles" are going to accept this, no matter what. But for the rest of us it will be interesting.
if think that jitter of 2 nSec is around -120 dB, then no wonder you don't seem to understand a damn word I am saying.
I don't know (or care) how Stereophile does it.
Typical stand-alone oscillators have jitter numbers in the single pSec range.
Pat, do you have a formula that equates ps or ns of jitter with a dB level of the sidebands created? Not frequency weighting or correlation which might affect the jitter's audibility, rather just the relationship between time shift and level.
Holy crap!, this jitter stuff sure is hard to make... Cheers
Pat, do you have a formula that equates ps or ns of jitter with a dB level of the sidebands created? Not frequency weighting or correlation which might affect the jitter's audibility, rather just the relationship between time shift and level.--Ethan
Zactly. There is no agreement on what it is, what it impacts, or how to replicate it - but there is defninte set in stone opinion on both sides as to whether it's audible or not.
It was a joke Brian. I'll agree that we don't necessarily have to know WHY we do or don't hear a difference - but that is kind of relevant to try to reproduce identical tracks with and without it for a group of people to listen to - don't ya think?Bryan