Eug
Lifer
- Mar 11, 2000
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Yep, and IMO this is a HUGE drawback of coaxial, and obviously much more so than any theoretical jitter arguments.Originally posted by: TastesLikeChicken
There are valid arguments for both sides of this issue. Theoretically, digital coax does have some advantages over TOS transmission since there's no digital to optical conversion. It also has some drawbacks, such as the potential for ground-loops.
I've encountered ground-loops before using coaxial. It doesn't happen very often, but when it does, it's very, very, very irritating. Ground loops are obviously not an issue with optical.
The main drawback of optical IMO is simply the cables. Longer optical cables can be problematic, they aren't as flexible as copper wire, and optical cables may cost more.
Actually, scratch that last point. In 2007, if you're going cheap, you're actually better off going with a cheap optical cable than a cheap coax cable IMO. The cheap coax cables often have poor shielding --> higher risk of ground loops. Oh and scratch the second last point too. Well-shielded coaxial cables aren't that flexible either.
Yup. The "golden ears" effect.In regards to audible differences, no blind tests have ever been able to establish that people can hear a difference between the two, even when people who claim to be able to detect a difference are used. The only real difference is apparent when the people tested know what type of transmission mode is being used in advance, which would imply that any audible difference is psychological in nature and not truly perceptive.
The weird part is for those "golden ears" it should be moot anyway, since they should probably be using HDMI and lossless, or else analogue outputs.