Thanks, Kijanki. Agreed on all counts, although IMO the words "little bit" in your post should be particularly emphasized.
To quote an excerpt from page 4 of the article:
Best regards,
-- Al
To quote an excerpt from page 4 of the article:
I performed the same tests using the low-jitter PS Audio Lambda transport as source. The results were very different. With a good source, cable direction didn't make a difference in the measurable jitter (fig.10). This suggests that the SV-3700or any poor-quality transmitterreacts with the cable's impedance to create jitter-inducing reflections in the interface. The directionality was probably caused by differences in the way the two RCA plugs were soldered to the cable; any bumps or discontinuities in the solder or RCA plug will cause a change in the characteristic impedance, which will cause higher-amplitude reflections in one direction than in the other. These reflections set up dynamically changing standing waves in the interface, introducing jitter in the embedded clock. These problems were reduced by the Lambda's higher-quality output circuit. In short, the worse the transport, the more cablesand their directionaffect sound quality.Exactly what I speculated in my previous post, with some added elaboration based on the measurements that were performed.
Best regards,
-- Al