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- Path: sparky!uunet!pipex!warwick!uknet!edcastle!sss
- From: sss@castle.ed.ac.uk (S S Sturrock)
- Newsgroups: rec.audio
- Subject: Re: Forget the DACs. How can transports sound different?
- Message-ID: <30590@castle.ed.ac.uk>
- Date: 21 Jan 93 13:44:14 GMT
- References: <24645@alice.att.com> <30486@castle.ed.ac.uk> <shetline-200193103810@128.89.19.74>
- Organization: Edinburgh University
- Lines: 75
-
- In article <shetline-200193103810@128.89.19.74> shetline@bbn.com (Kerry Shetline) writes:
- >In article <30486@castle.ed.ac.uk>, sss@castle.ed.ac.uk (S S Sturrock)
- >wrote:
- >> More to the point the DCC transport is very likely to affect the sound
- >> quality in much the same way as a CD transport so even if they are both run
- >> through the same DAC you still can't state unequivically that the
- >> difference in sound if there is one is due to the compression.
- >
- >Oh, you mean no effect at all? :-)
-
- No, just that until all other effects are accounted for the compression
- cannot take all the blame (or credit) for the particular features of the
- sound quality.
- >
- >> double blind testing is needed to get the stage where the finger can be
- >> pointed with any level of certainty at the compression, but only if the DAC
- >> used for both sources is the same one.
- >
- >Yes. And please put these highly doubtful claims about transports to the
- >same test. Even all of this talk about jitter doesn't seem to leave any
-
- These `claims' have been highly tested, differences in transports are well
- documented. They are due to deviation from the standards set down for
- various reasons. Rise/fall times of the pulses in the SP/DIF data stream
- are known to affect the sound significantly. Incompatibilities in the
- amplitude of signals used/expected between transport and DAC can adversely
- affect the sound. These came to light when it was shown that a DAC may
- work very well with one transport and not with another yet the transport it
- worked poorly with would work very well with a different DAC. I don't have
- the reference with me at the moment, I will check for them at home.
-
- >place for suspecting transports. If their is any jitter effect at all, it
- ^^^^^
- there
-
- >seems to be in the DACs. I've not heard one report of inconsistent or
- >jittery timing of data coming from a transport. (Maybe I've just missed
-
- You should read more.
-
- >such a report, but it seems unlikely since high-quality consistent data
- >timing is easily and cheaply achieved.) Here we go again... If the bits are
- >the same (a reasonable assumption, since CD error rates a typically *very*
- >low), and the timing is the same (again a reasonable assumption), what else
- >but some difference in the mechanical sound of a transport is left to make
- >a difference?
-
- See above and the references I will hunt out tonight.
- >
- >Without a good explanation, I'd still be forced to accept that transports
- >can sound different if well conducted A/B tests would show that people
-
- Such tests have been performed in true double blind conditions, again I
- will find the references. The tests on the transports were done as a
- result of the double blind testing to find a reason for the differences in
- sound of transports partnered with various DACs.
-
- >could consistently hear differences between transports. But with no such
- >data, and no good theory, the anectdotal 'evidence' is hardly compelling.
- >Under such circumstances, the idea that transports sound different is a
- >mere conjecture, not something to be bandied about as proven fact.
-
- I will provide you with the references, even the conclusions if I can spare
- the time to type them in.
-
- Hopefully that will lay this argument to rest until the next influx of new
- subscribers and we have to go through it all again.
-
-
-
- --
- Shane Sturrock, Biocomputing Research Unit, Darwin Building, Mayfield Road,
- University of Edinburgh, Scotland, Commonwealth of Independent Kingdoms. :-)
-
- Civilisation is a Haggis Supper with salt and sauce and a bottle of Irn Bru.
-