Unclejeff....In the analog world, signal to noise ratio has a direct effect on sound quality. The signal is the sound. Even a slight degradation will have some effect.
Digital is different. Signal degradation has no effect until it reaches a point where the information being transmitted is corrupted. The signal is not the sound. The information being transmitted is used to generate the signal that is the sound. This is the D/A function.
Analog goes downhill gradually. Digital goes over a cliff.
It is my simple observation that a splitter does not, in practice, drive you over that cliff. Clean digital lines are desirable, but largely cosmetic rather than functional.
Digital is different. Signal degradation has no effect until it reaches a point where the information being transmitted is corrupted. The signal is not the sound. The information being transmitted is used to generate the signal that is the sound. This is the D/A function.
Analog goes downhill gradually. Digital goes over a cliff.
It is my simple observation that a splitter does not, in practice, drive you over that cliff. Clean digital lines are desirable, but largely cosmetic rather than functional.