Yes of course. But you don't listen to jitter "itself" you listen to the distortion components that jitter is causing. Hence I quoted some random values. So putting numbers in us or ns without context is just a number so one can say: "ha look jitter is lower I told ya"You can't directly convert the dB value shown on a J-Test in this manner. Higher frequency jitter of equal amplitude will show as lower in level on a J-Test and it's also not particularly intuitive to be able to sum/total up the jitter when there are many components.
Yes.But my point is just that saying something is 'immune' when it's not is incorrect. Being resistant to jitter, or having a fairly low level of jitter are not the same as being immune.
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