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According to Dan Lavry, famous converter designer, and Hugh Robjohns (SOS writer), that's physically impossible with normal converter designs.Do you happen to live anywhere near me in Western Connecticut? If so, I'd love to come by for a listen in person.--Ethan
I don't know what physically impossible means. The equipment was modded to so that the internal source clock slaves to an external master clock. There are other master clock devices for home audio on the market, so apparently it's not impossible.
As far as the DB jitter test I took: A track consisting mainly of guitar, voice and cymbals was made. Then additional versions to the original were made with plus 10ns jitter, plus 30ns jitter, and plus 100ns. Added jitter was random over the entire spectrum, if my memory is correct. I can't tell you the exact methodology used in making the tracks.
Studio master clocks are not the same as how my products work. They are generally used for synchronizing events for editing. They are generally not used for playback. His article confuses the word-clock with the frequency I call master clock, which is generally 128 or 256 times the word-clock. Some of the things he says about master clocks are true, like with the A/D converter. However, all of the "master-clocks" that he tests are actually word-clock generators. The reason that I use the term "master-clock" is that this is the term that is used at the D/A chip. Unfortunately, the word also describes a system word-clock in a studio environment. Totally different. The tests that he performs are interesting primarily for studios. IMO, providing even a superb low-jitter word-clock is not very effective for reducing system jitter. The clocks need to be low-jitter true master clocks at 256X the word-clock frequency. This is how my devices work. When you provide only word-clocks, then the device must synchronize its internal clock to this and then the jitter is a function of the internal high-frequency clock, not so much the external word-clock.