User’s Guide OctaMic XTC
© RME
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14.2 Operation and Technical Background
In the analog domain one can connect any device to another device, synchronization is not
necessary. Digital audio is different. It uses a clock, the sample frequency. The signal can only
be processed and transmitted when all participating devices share the same clock. If not, the
signal will suffer from wrong samples, distortion, crackle sounds and drop outs.
AES/EBU, SPDIF, ADAT and MADI are self-clocking, an additional word clock connection in
principle isn't necessary. But when using more than one device simultaneously problems are
likely to happen. For example any self-clocking will not work in a loop cabling, when there is no
'master' (main clock) inside the loop. Additionally the clock of all participating devices has to be
synchronous. This is often impossible with devices limited to playback, for example CD players,
as these have no SPDIF input, thus can't use the self clocking technique as clock reference.
In a digital studio synchronisation is maintained by connecting all devices to a central sync
source. For example the mixing desk works as master and sends a reference signal, the word
clock, to all other devices. Of course this will only work as long as all other devices are
equipped with a word clock or sync input, thus being able to work as slave (some professional
CD players indeed have a word clock input). Then all devices get the same clock and will work
in every possible combination with each other.
Remember that a digital system can only have one master! If the OctaMic XTC uses its
internal clock, all other devices must be set to ‘Slave’ mode.
But word clock is not only the 'great problem solver', it also has some disadvantages. The word
clock is based on a fraction of the really needed clock. For example SPDIF: 44.1 kHz word
clock (a simple square wave signal) has to be multiplied by 256 inside the device using a spe-
cial PLL (to about 11.2 MHz). This signal then replaces the one from the quartz crystal. Big
disadvantage: because of the high multiplication factor the reconstructed clock will have great
deviations called jitter. The jitter of a word clock is much higher as when using a quartz based
clock.
The end of these problems should have been the so called Superclock, which uses 256 times
the word clock frequency. This equals the internal quartz frequency, so no PLL for multiplying is
needed and the clock can be used directly. But reality was different, the Superclock proved to
be much more critical than word clock. A square wave signal of 11 MHz distributed to several
devices - this simply means to fight with high frequency technology. Reflections, cable quality,
capacitive loads - at 44.1 kHz these factors may be ignored, at 11 MHz they are the end of the
clock network. Additionally it was found that a PLL not only generates jitter, but also rejects
disturbances. The slow PLL works like a filter for induced and modulated frequencies above
several kHz. As the Superclock is used without any filtering such a kind of jitter and noise sup-
pression is missing.
The actual end of these problems is offered by the
SteadyClock
technology of the OctaMic
XTC. Combining the advantages of modern and fastest digital technology with analog filter tech-
niques, re-gaining a low jitter clock signal of 22 MHz from a slow word clock of 44.1 kHz is no
problem anymore. Additionally, jitter on the input signal is highly rejected, so that even in real
world usage the re-gained clock signal is of highest quality.
Summary of Contents for OctaMic XTC
Page 5: ...User s Guide OctaMic XTC RME 5 User s Guide OctaMic XTC General ...
Page 12: ...12 User s Guide OctaMic XTC RME ...
Page 13: ...User s Guide OctaMic XTC RME 13 User s Guide OctaMic XTC Usage and Operation ...
Page 27: ...User s Guide OctaMic XTC RME 27 User s Guide OctaMic XTC Inputs and Outputs ...
Page 33: ...User s Guide OctaMic XTC RME 33 ...
Page 37: ...User s Guide OctaMic XTC RME 37 User s Guide OctaMic XTC Class Compliant Mode ...
Page 42: ...42 User s Guide OctaMic XTC RME ...
Page 43: ...User s Guide OctaMic XTC RME 43 User s Guide OctaMic XTC Technical Reference ...
Page 58: ...58 User s Guide OctaMic XTC RME 23 Block Diagram ...