
wes480
New member
I thought clocks only really came into play when you had lots of gear you were using. I guess I really still don't get it. I use an Aardvark Q10...i was reading this review:
""My new Echo Mia card provided much stronger competition than the 20-bit Echo Gina I've used as a benchmark in the past, but the Q10 still beat it quite easily, with noticeably sharper stereo imaging and focus, letting you hear further into the music. In an effort to isolate this improvement, I tried patching the S/PDIF out of the Q10 into the S/PDIF in of the Mia, and switching it to use this external clock. This tightened up the Mia sound quite a bit and made the two cards sound very similar, which would seem to prove the superiority of the Q10's clock. Aardvark has an enviable reputation in this area."
So...going digital to digital, and using the Q10s clock output....the sound is now better from the MIA? I don't get it...
Is my stuff really sounding better becuase of the clock built into the Aardvark? I thought that would only be useful if I were to link other gear to it?
""My new Echo Mia card provided much stronger competition than the 20-bit Echo Gina I've used as a benchmark in the past, but the Q10 still beat it quite easily, with noticeably sharper stereo imaging and focus, letting you hear further into the music. In an effort to isolate this improvement, I tried patching the S/PDIF out of the Q10 into the S/PDIF in of the Mia, and switching it to use this external clock. This tightened up the Mia sound quite a bit and made the two cards sound very similar, which would seem to prove the superiority of the Q10's clock. Aardvark has an enviable reputation in this area."
So...going digital to digital, and using the Q10s clock output....the sound is now better from the MIA? I don't get it...
Is my stuff really sounding better becuase of the clock built into the Aardvark? I thought that would only be useful if I were to link other gear to it?