Owner manual

Apollo 16 Hardware Manual Digital Clocking Basics 28
Clock jitter affects digital transmission and digital conversion differently, as follows:
• Clock jitter in digital transmission can be caused by a bad source clock, inferior cabling or improper
cable termination, and/or signal-induced noise (called “pattern-jitter” or “symbol-jitter”). Digital
signal formats like AES/EBU, S/PDIF, and ADAT all embed a clock in the digital signal so the receiv-
ing device can synchronize to the transmitted data bits correctly. The clock used for data recovery is
extracted from the signal using a clock synchronization circuit called a phase-locked-loop (PLL). This
data-recovery PLL must be designed to respond very quickly to attenuate high-frequency jitter and
avoid bit errors during reception. This clock from the data-recovery PLL cannot be used to generate the
clocks used for digital conversion without further clock conditioning! This is a very common design
flaw in most low- and mid-range digital converters.
• Clock jitter in digital conversion is what most people refer to when they discuss jitter. It’s easily ob-
served in a digital signal by looking at its spectrum in the frequency domain. A jittery signal will have
“side-lobes” around each frequency and/or spurious tones at random, inharmonic frequencies. Usu-
ally, the jitter will be worse with higher signal frequencies. You can test your converters by sampling a
high-quality 10 kHz sine wave, and viewing it in the frequency domain (available with any good wave
editing software package).
All modern over-sampling digital converters require a clock (called “m-clock”) that is many times (typically
several megahertz) higher than the sample clock. M-clock is easy to generate when the converter is the clock
master, but quite difficult to generate correctly when the converter needs to sync to an external clock.
External clock typically comes from a dedicated word clock input, or is extracted from an incoming digital AES/
EBU, S/PDIF, or ADAT signal. Word clock cannot be used by the converters until it is multiplied up to the m-clock
rate. This requires a PLL or other frequency multiplier circuit which will either be cheap and jittery, or expen-
sive and clean, depending on who makes the converter. As we said earlier, the clock recovered from the digital
inputs is unsuitable for use as the converter’s m-clock, but because it’s conveniently at the same frequency,
many designers don’t bother cleaning up this signal.
Since the clock recovery, clock multiplier, and clock conditioning circuitry define the jitter for analog conver-
sion, no external clock source can clean up the jitter introduced by these circuits, regardless of how perfect the
external source clock is. The best they can do is avoid making it any worse, but this is hardly worth the cost:
It’s much better (and less expensive) to use a good converter like Apollo than it is to try and fix a bad one with
an expensive master clock. The only reason to spend money on a high-quality master clock is to ensure that
multiple devices are synchronized correctly. This is essential for working with audio for film/video, or when
synchronizing multiple high-quality converters. A poor master clock can also affect imaging and clarity in a
multi-track environment.
Apollo 16 provides high-quality A/D and D/A conversion for recording and/or playback. With its pristine audio
path and high-quality clocking, it makes a great master or slave audio interface for every digital studio, and
thus provides a very cost effective way to improve overall sound quality.