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There are different flavors of jitter, just as there is different flavors of linear harmonic distortion. To me a high jitter source sounds incoherent. The clear calm presence that you feel/hear with vinyl is not there. When jitter is cured the music becomes peaceful and powerful. In my system using stock Sonos player as digital transport there slight harshness of upper frequencies when using a DAC with poor jitter rejection. The incoherence also dulls transients which affect low frequencies too. When I use a jitter-rejecting DAC these aspects improve drastically. I was looking for some samples online of high jitter vs low jitter recordings, but found none. I don't think it would be helpful unless you could play them on low jitter system. The observation tool has to be lower distortion than the distortion you are observing.
Here is a very good primer on some of the causes of jitter and what it sounds like.http://www.positive-feedback.com/Issue43/jitter.htmAs Rich states, the best way to tell if your system is "jittery" is to listen to products known to have lower jitter and compare them to what you currently have.The Apple TV is a very well known to have very high jitter. Perhaps you can try a different streaming device to see if you can detect the difference.While certain DACs using the Sabre chip claim to reduce jitter it is always best to reduce it at the source.
What jitter-rejecting DAC do you use?
Deepak, here is John Atkinson's jitter measurements for the SB3:http://www.stereophile.com/content/slim-devices-squeezebox-wifi-da-processor-measurementsIn summary he says, "The calculated jitter level was 321 picoseconds peak–peak, which is low. "Playing the digital output into a DAC with minimal jitter rejection (Altmann Attraction) my stock SB3 sounds better than the stock Sonos. When using the Buffalo DAC they sound identical, and much better.
Here is an article about the jitter measurements and how to read them.http://www.stereophile.com/reference/193jitter
The Apple TV is a very well known to have very high jitter. Perhaps you can try a different streaming device to see if you can detect the difference.While certain DACs using the Sabre chip claim to reduce jitter it is always best to reduce it at the source.
Jitter can sound like nothing. Literally. The current iteration of Apple Airport Express have high jitter, which I found out when trying to one to feed my Peachtree Audio Nova. The manufacturer of the Nova stepped down the resolution on the second set of digital inputs, because they got so many complaints from people thinking the problem was with the Nova, instead of their source.
So what did you notice about the sound of the AEX into the Nova via Toslink? Do you still use the Nova? What streaming device do you use now?
A friend of mine in chicago owns a small recording studio & went to college to be a recording engineer. His senior year thesis paper was on jitter. 15 years ago if not longer.Why has it taken so long to be addressed?