Jitter is measurable, correct?
certainly
"Will a cable of some determinate length not add some measurable, repeatable, non-arbitrary amount of jitter within a particular range of measurement, regardless of any jitter coming from the source component?"
Yes, assuming the signal is repeatable.
"Are there any cable manufacturers that measure and publish jitter specifications for each of their different cable products and cable lengths?"
I cannot think of any cable manufacturers that can afford a $150K analyzer from Agilent that it takes to measure this. Even JA of Stereophile with his latest and greatest AP system cannot measure it.
The other thing you must understand is that a lot of the jitter problem in cables is caused by imperfect receivers in the DAC, not the cable itself. If you put an analyzer at the end of the cable instead of the DAC receiver, everything changes. You lose half of the effects.
Steve N.
certainly
"Will a cable of some determinate length not add some measurable, repeatable, non-arbitrary amount of jitter within a particular range of measurement, regardless of any jitter coming from the source component?"
Yes, assuming the signal is repeatable.
"Are there any cable manufacturers that measure and publish jitter specifications for each of their different cable products and cable lengths?"
I cannot think of any cable manufacturers that can afford a $150K analyzer from Agilent that it takes to measure this. Even JA of Stereophile with his latest and greatest AP system cannot measure it.
The other thing you must understand is that a lot of the jitter problem in cables is caused by imperfect receivers in the DAC, not the cable itself. If you put an analyzer at the end of the cable instead of the DAC receiver, everything changes. You lose half of the effects.
Steve N.