Yelamanchili manohar
Well-Known Member
Hi all
This subject was touched upon in a different thread, so thought better to start a new thread without derailing the original.
There are ether regen users swearing by the improvements brough by the addition of an external master clock. However, on Dcs and ASR ( yeah i know ) there have been no reported improvements by this addition.
Thing to bear in mind, is that almost all DCS users are using network feeds for the files and not USB. And from my own reading, there seems to be no clock signal at all in ethernet transmission. It is only data being transmitted, which has to be buffered and then converted to a digital stream. Only once the digital bits are assembled this way do we have any notion of a time signal coming into play. So how come the ether regen is benefitting from clocking.
This got me thinking, and Iam wondering if the users reporting improvements with clocking are using USB inputs and not network inputs by any chance.
In an audiophilestyle site comparison between the clocked ether regen, clocked SOTM SNH-10G and a non clocked Melco S100. The melco came out on top. The ether regen with the addition of an external clock came really close. But the total price with the clock was more than the melco. This got me even more confused.
Any feed back or opinions on this will be much appreciated in deciding my next course of action, as I plan on investing in upgrading my network this summer. So should I go for a switch with clock or not, as there are not many around with clock inputs. Besides, I dont even have a clock at the moment, so that will be another spend on top. Thanks all
This subject was touched upon in a different thread, so thought better to start a new thread without derailing the original.
There are ether regen users swearing by the improvements brough by the addition of an external master clock. However, on Dcs and ASR ( yeah i know ) there have been no reported improvements by this addition.
Thing to bear in mind, is that almost all DCS users are using network feeds for the files and not USB. And from my own reading, there seems to be no clock signal at all in ethernet transmission. It is only data being transmitted, which has to be buffered and then converted to a digital stream. Only once the digital bits are assembled this way do we have any notion of a time signal coming into play. So how come the ether regen is benefitting from clocking.
This got me thinking, and Iam wondering if the users reporting improvements with clocking are using USB inputs and not network inputs by any chance.
In an audiophilestyle site comparison between the clocked ether regen, clocked SOTM SNH-10G and a non clocked Melco S100. The melco came out on top. The ether regen with the addition of an external clock came really close. But the total price with the clock was more than the melco. This got me even more confused.
Any feed back or opinions on this will be much appreciated in deciding my next course of action, as I plan on investing in upgrading my network this summer. So should I go for a switch with clock or not, as there are not many around with clock inputs. Besides, I dont even have a clock at the moment, so that will be another spend on top. Thanks all