A learned engineer @ one of the well-known & respected digital player companies wrote this once. I have picked this snippet up from his post:-
There are really only 3 three main parts to any transport.
1) the CD mechanism to read the data off the disc
2) the clocking and digital output methodology.
3) the powersupply
CD mechanism overall rigidity, smoothness of operation of the lens as it reads the disc, clamping the disc to reduce/eliminate wobble in (1) all have an effect on sound. Maybe subtle but there.
Clock stability in (2) above reduces jitter & hence read errors.
Poor power supply design in (3) can pollute quiet supplies with clock infested supplies. This could create spurious energy in the output data stream & reduce SNR &/or dynamic range thru an elevated noise floor.
Better designs pay more or much more attention to these details & the price goes up accordingly.
There are really only 3 three main parts to any transport.
1) the CD mechanism to read the data off the disc
2) the clocking and digital output methodology.
3) the powersupply
CD mechanism overall rigidity, smoothness of operation of the lens as it reads the disc, clamping the disc to reduce/eliminate wobble in (1) all have an effect on sound. Maybe subtle but there.
Clock stability in (2) above reduces jitter & hence read errors.
Poor power supply design in (3) can pollute quiet supplies with clock infested supplies. This could create spurious energy in the output data stream & reduce SNR &/or dynamic range thru an elevated noise floor.
Better designs pay more or much more attention to these details & the price goes up accordingly.