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Gee, I could be wrong, but......Judging from the pronounced dip in the noise response, around 10 kHz, my bet is that they ran it through a BPF before they made the measurement. That technique is widely used to prevent overloading of the measuring device, to extend useful range.
"Error correction codes CREATE jitter:In short, more & more accurate clocking are baby steps when the most powerful creation of jitter is during the CD READING itself.So a notably jittered signal is fed to the finest clocks but they cannot repair what they cannot see as the CD has already been read." Is this crap? Computer jocks...please chime in....
I know this is a proverbial can of worms, but it is worth opening in the context of anti-jitter technologies. The Nova Physics Memory Player created quite a stir, both good and bad, when it first appeared. Many claimed that it was/is a glorified computer running EAC, and that NP was bilking gullible philes with non-proprietary technology. The NP gang claims that in addition to RUR technology as found on EAC and other programs, the central issue controlling jitter revolves around error correction coding ("Reed Solomon codes"):"Error correction codes CREATE jitter:In short, more & more accurate clocking are baby steps when the most powerful creation of jitter is during the CD READING itself.So a notably jittered signal is fed to the finest clocks but they cannot repair what they cannot see as the CD has already been read." Is this crap? Computer jocks...please chime in....
As far as anti-jitter tweaks go, how about burning onto different CD-R media?I had fun the other night with a friend and my wife (audio fun, you pervs) listening to an original Aja CD, and copies burned (via EAC, at 4x speed) onto silver discs (Taiyo Yuden) and gold (Mitsui Audio Media, or MAM-A Gold - something like that). The burning was done on my plain old Dell 8300 stock internal drive - No fancy external burner hooked into a power conditioner, sitting on iso-pucks, pretreated CDs etc - Just pop in and burn, baby burn.Without knowing what I was putting in my Rotel 1072 CDP, they were both consistently able to pick the Gold out as being superior to the Silver, which was clearly superior to the original. On the gold, the highs were more extended and the grunge was reduced, to speak in absolutely precise audio terminology.I also made a 2nd silver copy, which I black magic-markered. This disc was also consistently preferred to the un-markered silver disc.At the end, I markered the gold, which we all felt was better than the un-markered gold, but I didn't burn another gold for direct comparison since I'm running low on them (and they cost ~ 5x more than the silvers).Perhaps what we were hearing was the result of less jitter? Like the (theoretically) superior quality of the Gold disc gave more accurate timing info to the CDPs speed control mechanism?? I read a paper the other week comparing the longevity and jitter characteristics of various CDRs, and the Gold was the best, IIRC.So maybe the realm of different CD-Rs, CD polishes etc. are manifesting their differences in the realm of jitter reduction??-Mike
Quote from: Geardaddy on 16 Mar 2008, 02:37 pm"Error correction codes CREATE jitter:In short, more & more accurate clocking are baby steps when the most powerful creation of jitter is during the CD READING itself.So a notably jittered signal is fed to the finest clocks but they cannot repair what they cannot see as the CD has already been read." Is this crap? Computer jocks...please chime in....It's probably crap, yes. But regardless, all you have to do is rip the CD on a computer (into an audiophile approved lossless format, of course) and then later send it to a $300 squeezebox or transporter or sonos or whatever to isolate your music totally from any possible problems arising from reading the CD in the first place. Unlike the Memory Player, those are solid state devices with no moving parts. They're basically just a chip that converts TCP/IP to digital audio, a DAC, and some analogue circuitry, and they have very low jitter at the digital out (at least the SB and TP do).And let me add that bit errors in the ripping process are essentially non-existent. Every CD I rip gets checked against an online database of checksums, and they almost always match (the only exceptions are the occasional scratched disk which can't be read properly).
On page 13, part 1 of this series, Scotty had mentioned replacing an external crystal and replacing it with a VCXO of the proper frequency.The VCXO seems to be a relatively inexpensive way to reduce jitter to very low levels.I'm not a design engineer, but this and reworking the power supply seem to be an attractive solution, any other thoughts ?
The SB has one of the lowest jitter outputs of the various WiFi devices, but far from inaudible. Reclocking it makes a huge improvement.Even these kinds of devices can have high jitter if the clock used is not an expensive clock and the S/PDIF output is not executed well. Sonos is a case in point.Steve N.
Quote from: art on 15 Mar 2008, 10:33 pmGee, I could be wrong, but......Judging from the pronounced dip in the noise response, around 10 kHz, my bet is that they ran it through a BPF before they made the measurement. That technique is widely used to prevent overloading of the measuring device, to extend useful range.You're absolutely right - it says so right at the top of the plot.
The SB has one of the lowest jitter outputs of the various WiFi devices, but far from inaudible.
Reclocking it makes a huge improvement.
Even these kinds of devices can have high jitter if the clock used is not an expensive clock and the S/PDIF output is not executed well.
Sonos is a case in point.Steve N.
Quote from: audioengr on 16 Mar 2008, 06:18 pmThe SB has one of the lowest jitter outputs of the various WiFi devices, but far from inaudible. Reclocking it makes a huge improvement.Even these kinds of devices can have high jitter if the clock used is not an expensive clock and the S/PDIF output is not executed well. Sonos is a case in point.Steve N.I agree. Running a stock SB3 or Duet's digital output thru my upgraded Digital Lens makes a nice improvement.