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People who download files from Stereophile to hear jitter would need to know that their own system didn't produce any jitter, wouldn't they? Otherwise they'd be listening to digital files containing jitter, on equipment that was adding jitter of its own while they listened. Has this been brought up and I missed it?
Quote from: bpape on 14 Mar 2008, 05:46 pmIt 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?BryanAs long as the group of people are together in one room listening to the same system, sure. One problem seems to be, unlike garden variety noise, the effects of jitter are epiphenomenal, kinda like harmonic distortion (you're not really hearing anything called jitter, jitter doesn't sound like anything, it is supposed to affect all frequencies all the time, you're hearing its effect, and most likely hearing it more by its absence, etc). But then again at these low levels, every change becomes epiphenomenal I guess.
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
The idea (I think....) was to have a pair of tracks that could be sent to a lot of different folks in different places to listen to on different systems. Bryan
Part of my 'joke' was identifying things like what you just mentioned and someone else previously did also.Bryan
Folks,This is going nowhere. So lets forget about jitter and lets share our personal experiences on one aspect of our system.Do you have a digital connection in your system ?If yes, have you tried, different digital cables and was there any difference to the sound of your system?Here's my input on the subject.Yes, different digital cables produce audible sound differences in my system.So lets go from the phenomenon to understanding and analysing the mechanism. If we all don't recognise the phenomenon, it is waste to go into analysing the cause, the parameters and steps to recreate it.
Here's a simple test of the effects of jitter. Try comparing the coax and optical digital output of an SB3.Here are jitter measurments from the SD forum:"I just purchased a brand new SB3, and a colleague subjected the digital outputs to a quick jitter measurement using Audio Precision equipment. Results: SB3 digital coax out jitter: ~99ps, SB3 digital optical out jitter: ~892ps"
In regards to the digital cable making a difference, i disagree totally that it's just impedence mismatching. How can one cable improve every system it's been used in, as is the case w/ mine? This very pricey item utterly transformed the output of my transport and dac. I see it as getting rid of jitter. What else could a cable do that could make digital sound really real? (I hate to use the phrase"analog")
The audible effect of jitter in digital audio is a subject which has been around and will come around for as long as we listen via PWM and other digitally encoded means......Part of the challenge here is the width and depth of the subject. Asking what is the “sonic signature of jitter and how to conquer it?” is exactly like asking “what is the sonic signature of distortion and how do I get it out of my system?” Alas this leaves the bewildered audiophile still sitting in front of his system wondering “what is the sonic signature of jitter and how to conquer it”? ....The sonic signature side of the question is in my experience that jitter makes the music fuzzy. Polishing off the fuzz is like any exercise in buffing in that how far to go will be dictated by taste, personal aesthetic criteria, and the resources available.
I know it angers - or at least irritates - some people to be told they can't possibly be hearing a change when they swap digital cables etc.
Quote from: Ethan Winer on 15 Mar 2008, 03:58 pmI know it angers - or at least irritates - some people to be told they can't possibly be hearing a change when they swap digital cables etc. As it should.