DAC Input Topology


I have a Holo May DAC KTE and all digital in is captured by a proprietary PLL (phase lock loop) circuit which uses a crystal Voltage Controlled Oscillator (VCXO) and discrete voltage regulators to eliminate jitter.  They make clear that all inputs are processed the same.  Is this the primary method used by most (all) DACs?  
I ask because I was previously convinced that I wanted to buy a steamer with I2s out.  I was under the impression that a great clock in the streamer would be passed to the DAC, but PLL doesn’t use the streamer’s clock.  My fallback was USB and the May DAC KTE makes claims regarding the quality of their USB interface.  In fact USB is the manufacturers preferred input.   Now I’m looking at the Aurender N20.  The selling point here is the OCXO clock, which is four to ten times more stable than the Holo’s clock.  Many find the AES, or coax to provide the best sound.  Those that prefer AES, does your DAC use the same voltage driven clock PLL design?  How does the Aurenders clock provide superior sound when the sampling clock is an order of magnitude less stable?   I’m trying to decide on if I’m buying a high quality USB, or AES cable.  Maybe both at some point, but budget only allows one at this point.

vonhelmholtz

Such hand wringing over minutiae! Uncertainty in timing (jitter) was a problem solved decades ago! Aurender's touting of their proprietary OXCO clock is hype to beguile the technically ignorant. Today's three-figure streamers are just as capable of transferring a bit-perfect file as as a four or five figure boutique streamer. A streamer is a router. It transfers incoming files to a digital processor (computer or DAC). Why spend thousands on Aurender? Is it a neurotic compulsion to spend money? Get an iFi Zen Stream and you'll be fine!

@jasonbourne52

I have an iFi Zen Stream and I’m trying to make sense of Aurender’s claims. My iFi Zen Stream has their top power supply and sounds good and sounded better than my previous analog system, but doesn’t match my analog whereas many Aurender systems compete with high end analog. I prefer Roon vs Conductor, but Aurender users, not all, seem taken with their higher end AES/coax outputs. I’m questioning if this is due in part to the methodology used to capture the signal.

I question the need to spend so much on the Aurender. The internal parts count is only a fraction of the retail price. The enthusiastic claims by owners is after all subjective. I'd like to see some measurements comparing it to the iFi.