Hi Alex,
I appreciate your response. However, I am still confused.
If a more accurate external word clock does not reduce jitter, how does it improve sound in a single box CD/SACD player that has only one master internal word clock? Synchronization by an external clock would be unnecessary since there is only one clock. The unit's transport is 'slaved' to the internal clock which connects with the DAC. The transport and the DAC are already synchronized by the single internal word clock.
According to what I have read (at least the way I understand it), it is inaccurate timing and/or timing errors that lead to clock jitter. A more accurate and more stable word clock, provides more accurate timing and fewer timing errors. The result is significantly less jitter resulting in improved sonics.
Is this not an accurate statemnt? Please explain.
Could you explain the difference between asynchronous and synchronous digital in layman terms and tell why you feel asynchronous digital is better than synchronous?
Thanks again
I appreciate your response. However, I am still confused.
If a more accurate external word clock does not reduce jitter, how does it improve sound in a single box CD/SACD player that has only one master internal word clock? Synchronization by an external clock would be unnecessary since there is only one clock. The unit's transport is 'slaved' to the internal clock which connects with the DAC. The transport and the DAC are already synchronized by the single internal word clock.
According to what I have read (at least the way I understand it), it is inaccurate timing and/or timing errors that lead to clock jitter. A more accurate and more stable word clock, provides more accurate timing and fewer timing errors. The result is significantly less jitter resulting in improved sonics.
Is this not an accurate statemnt? Please explain.
Could you explain the difference between asynchronous and synchronous digital in layman terms and tell why you feel asynchronous digital is better than synchronous?
Thanks again