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Steve1up - what you are talking about is gross misreading of the data, not jitter.
However, it is simply incorrect to say that because DD or DTS data is transmitted in packets that it always sounds identical after decoding when transmitted down an SPDIF cable. Briefly, the reason is as follows:-
In both PCM and any other type of digital transmission over the SPDIF interface, the master clock signal is contained as part of the overall SPDIF signal and has to be reconstructed downstream. It is this derived master clock signal that is used to reclock out buffered data and drive the receiver's DACs and so it is susceptible to jitter in the transmitted SPDIF signal, as the industry standard PLLs used to pull out the clock are not particularly good at filtering out jitter. There are ways round this but they are rarely implemented in commercial AV receivers as they are quite expensive.
In my experience you will usually be able to hear differences between properly implemented and badly implemented DVD players, when using their digital outputs into commercial AV receivers, and it will not pay to skimp here if audio quality matters to you.
John Dawson (Arcam)
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