

The problem occurs during seeking because the Red Book (audio CD standard) doesn't require block-accurate addressing. In the context of digital audio extraction from Compact Discs, seek jitter causes extracted audio samples to be doubled-up or skipped entirely if the Compact Disc drive re-seeks.

Hmmm.wouldn't the Behringer, being an ADC, convert the analog input into a digital signal and then apply any effects (such as upsampling, jitter removal) etc? Originally Posted by xenithon /img/forum/go_quote.gif if you have a combined DAC/amp which only has digital input - you cannot connect analog from SACD to DAC/amp but you could connect it to the ADC, then via digital to the DAC/amp. I appreciate there is quite a bit of converting going on, but might this work? I am also thinking about situations where you cannot playback SACDs, e.g. DAC would work its little magic to convert to analog and send this via it's analog outs digital signal would be sent to external DAC (e.g., via S/PDIF coax or AES/EBU XLR) SRC2496 would take that analog signal and convert to digital, remove any jitter, do any other "cleanup" like reclock the digital signal, and optionally resample to the specified sampling rate SACD player analog out to ADC analog in (e.g., Behringer SRC2496) Has anyone used the analog output of their SACD player to feed an ADC? Have you find this to improve/degrade the sound?įor example, the following hypothetical situation As you may know, SACD players do not have digital out (well, very few do and they are extremely costly).
