Thanks guys, some good info. The quote in my first post comes from Dan Lavry whom I thought had some experience?

. He started into this when I posted this:
Quote:
It is reported by Radio frequency Engineers that SPDIF cables needs to be 2 meters or longer on a properly terminated 75 ohm line, shorter than this leads to all sorts of cable reflection problems.
And he laid into this with:
Quote:
That is not so, and no self respecting radio frequency engineer or any other electrical engineer will come up with such false claim. In fact, the shorter the cable, the better you are. I am not suggesting to use 3 inches cables, but a 3 foot is better then 10 foot, and at over 30 feet you are certainly asking for trouble.
He seemed so bullish that I had to get to the bottom of this. I find what he says confusing (as I'm on unsure ground) & contradictory
Quote:
When there are reflections, the change in voltage happens when the current waves arrives at the end and the beginning of the line. There is no "good time" to look at the signal before the reflections alter the signal. The alteration happens instantly when the signal hits the cable ends.
So according to this the cable length is immaterial as the original signal is instantly overlaid by any reflection? But he is stating that short cables are the ones that show the least reflections

??? He also claims that the signal can bounce back & forth:
Quote:
At 2 meters cable (9nsec), and you have around 20 back and forth reflections between transitions, for 44.1KHz SPDIF. That is not bad, but with 1 foot (1.5nsec cable) you have 118 back and forth reflections, so the decay before the next transition is MUCH BETTER then that of the 2 meter.
Pure bunkum, by the sound of it - how can he be so off base?