0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 8357 times.
I know the Slim Device TP is an attempt at this, but it still needs further mods to make the grade (a la ModWright or Paychev). The Nova Physics Memory player is another variation of this concept (sans networking technology) but I do not have $17,500 to burn on that....
Darren, I totally agree with you. The whole "psychoacoustic" realm (we in biomedical sciences call the placebo phenomenon) is incredibly powerful. I have always done my best to perform blind testing with multiple participants when I am evaluating gear, but as BrianM says....its hard.
A friend of mine and I are planning a blind shootout between a Sonos + Exemplar USB tube DAC vs Boulder modded SB3 and my Granite Audio 657. Should be interesting. I am tired of pontificating about this crap. I need to do some listening...
It sounds like the source of jitter in all of these discussions seems to be the internal clock. And the methods proposed to reduce jitter within the unit itself (not on the disk) is to treat, replace or intercept the clock's signal and make it more precise.So, in summary, what tweaks are available to us, outside of treating the disk)? I've tried to summarize the discussions below:(1) treating the existing clock crystal (e.g. Jon Risch's sand bag tweak, or applying Moretite or some other kind of vibration reducing compound) - effectiveness, slight - cost, cheap - ability to do ones-self, easily done
(2) replacing the clocking mechanism with something more precise (e.g. Superclock or some other internal clock replacement) - effectiveness, noticeable - cost, @$200-400 parts plus labor - ability to do ones-self, need specialized knowledge
(3) external reclocker - effectiveness, about the same as replacing the internal clock (I'm guessing here so please step in if I am mistaken) - cost, not inexpensive - ability to do ones-self, plug it in (may be dependent on the ability of the player to interface with such a device)
(4) what else?Please corret any assumptions I may have made above that you perceive to be incorrect, based on your experience (not your opinions, please).Enjoy,Bob
Only works for SPDIF. Which is the only application that jitter needs to be addressed. (I already showed in the other thread that jitter in a stand-alone player is not much of a problem. Stop worrying about it unless you have lots of time and money. Mostly the latter.)
Quote from: BobM on 18 Mar 2008, 01:19 pmIt sounds like the source of jitter in all of these discussions seems to be the internal clock. And the methods proposed to reduce jitter within the unit itself (not on the disk) is to treat, replace or intercept the clock's signal and make it more precise.So, in summary, what tweaks are available to us, outside of treating the disk)? I've tried to summarize the discussions below:(1) treating the existing clock crystal (e.g. Jon Risch's sand bag tweak, or applying Moretite or some other kind of vibration reducing compound) - effectiveness, slight - cost, cheap - ability to do ones-self, easily doneAnd how much will it reduce jitter? It won't. It might isolate it from microphonics. Not as much a problem as you might want to believe.
Quote(2) replacing the clocking mechanism with something more precise (e.g. Superclock or some other internal clock replacement) - effectiveness, noticeable - cost, @$200-400 parts plus labor - ability to do ones-self, need specialized knowledge"Precise" has nothing to do with jitter. Clocks that come out of a certain corner of the globe seem to think so. They are wrong. Period.Won't do diddly-squat unless you have a really clean power supply, and good distribution chain inside the unit. Which most don't have to begin with. Problem best addressed by fixing existing problems first.
Quote(3) external reclocker - effectiveness, about the same as replacing the internal clock (I'm guessing here so please step in if I am mistaken) - cost, not inexpensive - ability to do ones-self, plug it in (may be dependent on the ability of the player to interface with such a device)Only works for SPDIF. Which is the only application that jitter needs to be addressed. (I already showed in the other thread that jitter in a stand-alone player is not much of a problem. Stop worrying about it unless you have lots of time and money. Mostly the latter.)..
SPDIF cannot be fixed or cured because it is inherently flawed.