It may well do. I merely assert that this cannot be anything to do with the greater accuracy of the external clock.
Reread what Innuos say about the clock in the PhoenixNet. They are careful not to attribute anything to their clock’s accuracy in this context. They know what they are doing.
If you work in a commercial capacity yourself then you will appreciate that economies of scale may indeed make it straightforward for a company to use a clock they know to be quiet rather than to invest precious R&D time and money seeking to source a cheaper clock that is similarly quiet.
You clearly believe ethernet clock accuracy has an impact on sound quality. If you could explain how, in your own words, the timing of an asynchronous error-correcting buffered data stream which is transformed into a completely different format by a streamer can have any effect at all on sound quality then we may have a basis for further dialogue. If not then I’m out, content that I have made my point clearly.
Thanks.