Using a 110 ohm balanced cable in an unbalanced manner will change its characteristic impedance in some arbitrary manner, but it is safe to assume that in most cases it is unlikely to change it to 75 ohms. The resulting impedance mismatches between the cable and the two components it is connecting will, to some degree, degrade the waveform quality of the signal as received by the DAC.
Depending on many variables, most of them unspecified and essentially unpredictable, that may or may not result in some increase in jitter at the point of D/A conversion. Although in principle jitter is always undesirable, depending on its frequency components and other characteristics, and on the overall sonics of the system and the recordings, and on listener preferences, such an increase might under some circumstances be subjectively preferable. For example, as stated in this paper:
Regards,
-- Al
Depending on many variables, most of them unspecified and essentially unpredictable, that may or may not result in some increase in jitter at the point of D/A conversion. Although in principle jitter is always undesirable, depending on its frequency components and other characteristics, and on the overall sonics of the system and the recordings, and on listener preferences, such an increase might under some circumstances be subjectively preferable. For example, as stated in this paper:
Another interesting thing about audibility of jitter is it's ability to mask other sibilance in a system. Sometimes, when the jitter is reduced in a system, other component sibilance is now obvious and even more objectionable than the original jitter was. Removing the jitter is the right thing to do however, and then replace the objectionable component. The end result will be much more enjoyable.Consistent with that, IMO introducing a known and predictable degradation of the quality of a signal is not the way to build a system, regardless of how good the results may initially seem to be. One wouldn't (I hope) knowingly buy a digital component designed by someone who allowed its output or input impedance to depend on the value of whatever resistor he happened to randomly pick from a cookie jar of assorted resistors. So why design a system that way?
Jitter can even be euphonic in nature if it has the right frequency content. Some audiophiles like the effect of even-order harmonics in tubes, and like tubes, jitter distortion can in some systems "smooth" vocals. Again, the right thing to do is reduce the jitter and replace the objectionable components. It is fairly easy to become convinced that reducing jitter is not necessarily a positive step, however this is definitely going down the garden path and will ultimately limit your pursuit of audio nirvana.
Sibilance in a system caused by preamp, amps and other components and cables can also be so high that changes in jitter are not very audible. This is why there is such contention on the web forums about jitter and its importance.
Regards,
-- Al