Ping: John Curl. CDT/CDP transports

Status
Not open for further replies.
Can't speak for "we" - but I've done that (it's in my posts). They are pretty simple to use. One you've done sine, swawooth, square and noise, you might be curious about music signals. It's the ultimate step in the verification.
 
You'd have to look very closely to tell PAL/SECAM noise from NTSC. The horizontal sweep frequencies are very close. 15.75 and 15.62 IIRC

True I observed this on the very first SONY test CD circa 1982, also undithered BTW. Highly unlikely to find those in Japan, had to love those quartz delay lines with the pencil marks for calibration.
 
Last edited:
Traditional PAL would be 15.625kHz IIRC. An FFT ought to be able to distinguish the various interference sources.

Maybe this is time to remind people of a possibly useful forensic idea which someone developed a few years ago: given a sound recording, you may be able to determine when it was made by looking at the frequency variation of the hum and matching this to mains frequency variations. It has some similarities to tree ring dating. I suppose someone must keep records of the mains frequency (it would be National Grid here in the UK) and can make these available to people who need to know.
 
So take the digital data and process it with any DAC you want. Claims like "we remove the jitter from the data before it is used", ARE hubris.

Hi Scott,

how about USB intrinsic jitter removal, what is your opinion.
 

Attachments

  • usb_dacs_jitter_test.png
    usb_dacs_jitter_test.png
    47.3 KB · Views: 113
Hi Scott,

how about USB intrinsic jitter removal, what is your opinion.

Pavel my comment was only in the context that jitter can not impart information i.e. when I transfer a file from a USB hard drive to my computer drive for later play either the bits are the same or they are not.

There are numerous ways to clean-up jitter as long as it is not bad enough to drop data.

To repeat...
4 - Removes jitter from the music data before you play it (something not possible when playing a moving disc or a file directly)

is nonsense or stated so poorly you can't figure out what it means. It attempts to describe a process that removes jitter from data that can't be done when simply playing a file off of the disk. What does playing a file off of the disk have to do with USB? I can only conclude that they imply data transferred to a disk via USB has some unknown info-taint. That's Max's thing.
 
Last edited:
Status
Not open for further replies.