peufeu wrote:
Tent stocks VCXOs suitable for audio frequencies.
Have looked at that, but spending £60 on two VCXO's is way out of my budget im afraid

No offence to Guido, i'm sure his parts are top notch but I can't justify the price sadly. The £/EUR rate sucks in cases like this!
peufeu wrote:
In the current project I'm working on with other guys from here, we will have two clocks, one for 44.1k and one for 48k frequencies, and the CPU will decide which one to use, probably by only powering one at a time to avoid interferences.
This is exactly how I'd do it in this case. Getting a 48KHz based oscillator - no problem, Farnell and RS stock those... but getting a 44.1KHz based one, forget it.
peufeu wrote:
As for the chip this topic is about, I agree with Jocko.....
OK, well the samples cost me nothing

peufeu wrote:
Actually, if you use the simplest way of making a slaved source, which is to send a clock to a CD player or a SPDIF-encoded clock to a soundcard, you then use your SPDIF receiver in slave mode, which means there is no clock pkase issue. CS8416 contains a double-buffer (a 2-sample deep FIFO if you will) which takes care of that. So, no clock phase problem (I checked that in my previous DAC and can confirm that it works as advertised).
I don't think I can really do this. One of the sources will be an iMac and opening it up to inject an audio clock into that is out of the question, although it does have an SPDIF input, MacOS X doesn't have any way of slaving clock! Another point is that I may put a USB input on the DAC using PCM2706, and use it's i2s output - i'm aware this is also affected by jitter due to how the SpAct clock recovery from USB works, and I would want to reclock it too.