On Tue, 31 Mar 2020 09:53:16 +0100, Jim web wrote:

> But with digital LPCM transfers they should just 'pass the parcel' and 
> deliver at the end of the chain what got put in at the start.

Assuming the clocks at each end are locked. If they aren't clicks are a 
common side effect as the reciever has to drop or invent a frame of data 
once they get too far apart. These can come in groups spaced away from each 
depending on how the clocks drift relative to each other and how stable 
(jitter) one or the other are.

Don't know anything about the kit involved here either. I get the impression 
no interkit connections are digital so the above is a red herring. And 
"domestic" digital interconnects can recover the clock from the data stream.

The fact the setup has recently moved and the problem started with that move 
would have me moving it back to where it was and seeing if the problem 
disappears. It could be interferrence pick up in the connection to the 
Bluetooth Tx, unlikely if that is at line (high, headphone) level. 

In the move did any parts get changed? Wall wart PSU's in particular, they 
are not all created equal, some maybe more prone to letting mains 
disturbances through than others.

Does the kit move now mean the Bluetooth headphones are being used closer to 
any other 2.4 GHz than they were before? Turn that bit of kit off.

-- 
Cheers
Dave.



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