https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=grzoqEb2KMk&t=2s
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Here is a video I often recommend with a simple explanation of what can go wrong with a digital signal fed into a DAC. It includes the topic of jitter. While discussing the signal passing into the DAC, its principles can also apply to the signal within the DAC unit. Please let us know if this helps. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=grzoqEb2KMk&t=2s |
Proper spdif connection between transport and dac should be made using 75ohm bnc. George - You are dead right. Just buying a 75 ohm cable with BNC's does not guarantee that the BNC connectors are 75 ohms either, particularly from Marketertek. I have 75 ohms cables with 50 ohm BNC on the ends from Marketertek. Also, BNC to RCA adapters should be 75 ohms as well. Here are some cable jitter measurements, including some from Markertek: http://www.audiocircle.com/index.php?topic=154425.0 Steve N. Empirical Audio |
I suspect a lot of new dacs sound better than your Cambridge but it doesn't have to do with just jitter.Thanks for the additional references on dacs -- that's a good start! As for the quoted comment, @headphonedreams may be right about that, but it leads to a more basic question. By my standards, the Cambridge is a fairly expensive (and well-reviewed) unit, but the sound it gives to a Redbook CD doesn't compete with that of my more modest phono (Technics SL-D2 with a Nagoka MP-110). Can I expect to get comparable sound quality with a CD player and DAC, without spending well over $1000, or is this the unavoidable result of the 44/16 format? |
Sorry that first 75ohm bnc plug link, was a bnc to rca adapter, not a plug. what I meant to put up was this. https://www.bhphotovideo.com/images/images2000x2000/Comprehensive_BP_2C7559P_BP2C7559P_75_Ohm_Male_2... Cheers George |
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