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#1
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1. Is there any reason to believe that certain kinds of feet on a CD player
will make it less susceptible to vibration? In a stand alone CD player is vibration even a problem? 2. Error correction, does it correct all errors on a normal readable disk? 3. Has there ever really been a problem with audible jitter in consumer players? TIA |
#2
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(Comments inserted)
"Michael McKelvy" wrote in message nk.net... 1. Is there any reason to believe that certain kinds of feet on a CD player will make it less susceptible to vibration? In a stand alone CD player is vibration even a problem? A properly designed dc player shows little effect from small vibrations. Many cheaper changers etc are worse about this. You can try lightly tapping on the case while playing a disc, or pounding somewhat harder on the table beside the player, gradually increasing, and at some point the player will probably skip. At a lesser level, if one uses an oscilloscope to view the tracking or focus error waveforms at the test points inside the unit, it is obvious that external vibrations do affect the pickup while playing. I can even SHOUT at the pickup and see the waveform of my voice superimposed. This is because of the way pickups are designed, much like a speaker voice-coil. This is rarely a problem, but I'm all for eliminating as much of this as practical for technical reasons. 2. Error correction, does it correct all errors on a normal readable disk? Yes. Even in fairly extreme cases, when not corrected, the errors are concealed. Much worse and the player will stop, stutter, skip, etc. 3. Has there ever really been a problem with audible jitter in consumer players? A matter of debate for audiophiles, but rarely if ever audible. TIA You're welcome. Mark Z. |
#3
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"Michael McKelvy" wrote in message
nk.net 1. Is there any reason to believe that certain kinds of feet on a CD player will make it less susceptible to vibration? Sure, but is to fix an observed problem or a problem that will never actually occur? IOW how many people have only one place to put their CD player, and its on top of a subwoofer? As a rule good CD players aren't bothered by normal vibration levels. In a stand alone CD player is vibration even a problem? Depends where you put it, of course. However, I've had no problems with CD players in the same shelf units as speakers. 2. Error correction, does it correct all errors on a normal readable disk? Yes. 3. Has there ever really been a problem with audible jitter in consumer players? Never ever saw or heard any. Not to say that its impossible, just very unlikely. Most problems with jitter arose when people tried to split CD players into transports and DACs in different boxes. Later on this split became common with DVD players and multimedia receivers, but by then the digital interface and decoding technology in the receivers was greatly improved. |
#4
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On Sat, 11 Sep 2004 03:12:02 GMT, "Michael McKelvy"
wrote: 1. Is there any reason to believe that certain kinds of feet on a CD player will make it less susceptible to vibration? In a stand alone CD player is vibration even a problem? Yes, but OTOH no, in that order. 2. Error correction, does it correct all errors on a normal readable disk? No, you'll typically get one sub-millisecond 'best guess' interpolation every five minutes, and less than one 'mute' error per CD, otherwise data recovery is *perfect*. Do you think that kind of error level is audible? 3. Has there ever really been a problem with audible jitter in consumer players? That's a vexed question, but probaly not, with the possible exception of some exotic 'high end' designs. The only noticeable pattern with 'high end' designs (aside from ludicrous pricing) is that this is where you'll find the *really* incompetent designs....... -- Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering |
#5
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![]() "Stewart Pinkerton" wrote in message ... On Sat, 11 Sep 2004 03:12:02 GMT, "Michael McKelvy" wrote: 1. Is there any reason to believe that certain kinds of feet on a CD player will make it less susceptible to vibration? In a stand alone CD player is vibration even a problem? Yes, but OTOH no, in that order. 2. Error correction, does it correct all errors on a normal readable disk? No, you'll typically get one sub-millisecond 'best guess' interpolation every five minutes, and less than one 'mute' error per CD, otherwise data recovery is *perfect*. Do you think that kind of error level is audible? It never has been on any CD I've played. Either they play fine or if the disk has scratches it will sound bad. 3. Has there ever really been a problem with audible jitter in consumer players? That's a vexed question, but probaly not, with the possible exception of some exotic 'high end' designs. The only noticeable pattern with 'high end' designs (aside from ludicrous pricing) is that this is where you'll find the *really* incompetent designs....... -- Why am I not surpised? Only the "high end" would put a $100.00 cd player in a $500.00 cabinet and claim it was to improve problems with vibrations. Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering |
#6
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On Sun, 12 Sep 2004 10:17:31 GMT, "Michael McKelvy"
wrote: "Stewart Pinkerton" wrote in message .. . On Sat, 11 Sep 2004 03:12:02 GMT, "Michael McKelvy" wrote: 3. Has there ever really been a problem with audible jitter in consumer players? That's a vexed question, but probaly not, with the possible exception of some exotic 'high end' designs. The only noticeable pattern with 'high end' designs (aside from ludicrous pricing) is that this is where you'll find the *really* incompetent designs....... -- Why am I not surpised? Only the "high end" would put a $100.00 cd player in a $500.00 cabinet and claim it was to improve problems with vibrations. Mark Levinson put a $50 'CD jukebox' mechanism in a $10,000 cabinet, and make all kinds of technobabble claims for it................ -- Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering |
#7
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![]() "Stewart Pinkerton" wrote in message ... Mark Levinson put a $50 'CD jukebox' mechanism in a $10,000 cabinet, and make all kinds of technobabble claims for it................ It's called "value adding" by the rich and greedy. Fortunately at that price it would only sell to someone else who is rich and stupid. They deserve each other. TonyP. |
#8
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![]() "Stewart Pinkerton" wrote ... On Sat, 11 Sep 2004 03:12:02 GMT, "Michael McKelvy" wrote: 1. Is there any reason to believe that certain kinds of feet on a CD player will make it less susceptible to vibration? In a stand alone CD player is vibration even a problem? Yes, but OTOH no, in that order. 2. Error correction, does it correct all errors on a normal readable disk? No, you'll typically get one sub-millisecond 'best guess' interpolation every five minutes, and less than one 'mute' error per CD, otherwise data recovery is *perfect*. Note that "Red-Book" audio CDs have much looser error-correction than the "Yellow-Book" format used for data CDs (which actually is "perfect") after error correction. Do you think that kind of error level is audible? I don't, but then my ears are only flesh-colored. They're not even tin-color, much less *golden*. :-) |
#9
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"Stewart Pinkerton" wrote ...
Mark Levinson put a $50 'CD jukebox' mechanism in a $10,000 cabinet, and make all kinds of technobabble claims for it........... But surely the quality of their ones and zeroes are superior? :-) |
#10
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On Sun, 12 Sep 2004 08:12:24 -0700, "Richard Crowley"
wrote: "Stewart Pinkerton" wrote ... Mark Levinson put a $50 'CD jukebox' mechanism in a $10,000 cabinet, and make all kinds of technobabble claims for it........... But surely the quality of their ones and zeroes are superior? :-) Well, of course! Ones are guaranteed to be between 0.9999999 and 1.000001, while zeroes are between 0 and 0.000001. Of course, the receiver is perfectly happy if ones are between 0.67 and 1.5, and zeroes are between 0 and 0.3, but that doesn't sell the 'high-end magic', now does it? :-) BTW, in case anyone wonders, the above was a joke, in that ML don't actually guarantee that their digital datastream is better than that of the cheapest Magnavox portable player. Because they couldn't, since both use the same basic reading mechanism............. -- Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering |
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