Project CD Box RS2T and reclocker


Has anyone used a reclocker with a Project CD Box RS2T transport?  What hardware?  Results?

allvinyl

Showing 5 responses by thyname

jasonbourne71's avatar

jasonbourne71

364 posts

 

Waste of money! Present day DAC’s have asynchronous input receivers that handle the timing of incoming data. You’d have to go way back to find a DAC that needed a reclocker!

Including the CD transports? In other words, are you saying a connect a CD transport to my DAC, via S/PDIF, will the clocks in my CD transport and DAC be synced?

 

Do you own a DAC?

 

Jitter from the transport is a non-existent problem solved decades ago!

😂😂🤦‍♂️🤦‍♂️

 

No need then to sync the transport and DAC to reduce/eliminate jitter (uncertainty in timing). The input receiver of that DAC and all present day DAC’s re-clocks the incoming data.

Are you sure about this? On reclocking. USB yes, things like S/PDIF or Toslink, certainly not. Which is what you use with your $16 eBay “transport”

 

jasonbourne71’s avatar

jasonbourne71

369 posts

And yes, I do use a DAC and transport connected by a coax RCA cable.

 

@jasonbourne71 : what’s your DAC by the way? The sound card in your computer?

 

jasonbourne71's avatar

jasonbourne71

370 posts

 

A DAC is essentially a sound card. That’s all! Put it in a fancy machined-from-a-solid-billet case and you can charge $50K for the same parts as the $100 KTB DAC. Nobody will be able to tell the difference from, say, the real expensive Audio Note DAC! Because Hi-End DAC’s are a good example of confirmation bias!

 


@jetter : claiming to address jitter on the incoming S/PDIF is one thing and reclocking the signal is another, totally different.

The input receiver of that DAC and all present day DAC's re-clocks the incoming data. So no need for a clock between the transport and DAC. Jitter from the transport is a non-existent problem solved decades ago!