You think great DACs are realtively immune to the transport use? I always naively[?] felt thgat a good DAC should be able to deal with whatever jitter the source might present; maybe we are there
Interesting question - I wonder what experts think?
I suspect some DAC's are becoming relatively immune to digital source and jitter. Clocks and algorithms continue to improve so inherent jitter reduction is improving also (we went from PLL to double PLL's to buffering and asynchonous sampling). However not all forms of jitter are the same so the quality of the rejection may vary depending on what the source is creating. Some will reject a greater variety and a greater level of jitter than others so in essence they might sound the same with most transports. Of course some combinations, even older ones, may just happen to work really well, as the transport jitter is just the type that the PLL loop can deal with.
An old AES paper showed that certain forms of 20 nanosec jitter were inaudible - this is a huge amount by modern standards - so if people hear jitter artifacts then it may not even be an issue of "how much jitter" at all but a more sinister issue of "what type of jitter". If you consider source music and jitter may be related to eachother (IMD) then there are probably an infinite number of combinations. Added variables are that one may not be able to hear it, or your speakers may hide/mask it, or the track may be hypercompressed (other distortion dominates), or the track was recorded with a jittery A to D in the first place (so nothing can fix it)
I suspect we are way closer to jitter immmunity to the point of inaudibility than we were in the 80's and even the 90's. I wonder what others think - Are we really there?