10psec is a bogus spec IME. It's generally the specification for the oscillator before it's installed into a circuit. In the circuit, the jitter from that 10psec oscillator usually translates to 500 psec, sometimes even more. I've measured these things on my bench many times. It takes an experienced, educated designer with clever tricks to get 10psec of jitter from any device, including a USB converter, Ethernet converter or a reclocker. Nobody else comes close to 10psec that I get from all of my products. 7psec from my Synchro-Mesh. I continually have customers and other vendors bringing over things to test on my bench. All disappointing.
No matter what your digital source is, the jitter can be lowered by using a Synchro-Mesh reclocker and a good BNC cable. If you DAC does not reclock, this will still improve things, just not as much .
As for USB, I recommend this regenerator with LPS:
https://sotm-usa.com/collections/sotm-ultra/products/copy-of-tx-usbultra-regenerator-1
Even with USB, the best scenario is usually an outboard USB converter with LPS feeding a BNC coax to your DAC.
Steve N.
Empirical Audio
No matter what your digital source is, the jitter can be lowered by using a Synchro-Mesh reclocker and a good BNC cable. If you DAC does not reclock, this will still improve things, just not as much .
As for USB, I recommend this regenerator with LPS:
https://sotm-usa.com/collections/sotm-ultra/products/copy-of-tx-usbultra-regenerator-1
Even with USB, the best scenario is usually an outboard USB converter with LPS feeding a BNC coax to your DAC.
Steve N.
Empirical Audio