Thanks Matt and Jim. Lynx has a type 18 buffer set which equals 1024, and it is set to double buffer.
I have figured out quite a bit just now, and I would love to hear your thoughts on this.
Fact 1
There is enough bandwidth for uncorrupted high resolution audio (e.g. 5000kbps).
Evidence
Playing the same file back from the client SSD to master SSD results in perfect playback
Fact 2
It is not audio hardware or playback software related.
Evidence
I then took the EMU 0202 to the client and re-created the same dropouts, albeit they were silent dropouts, and not digital clicks/scratches; large puffy gaps in playback.
Appendix
Here's where it gets interesting. The master is connected by wire to the D-Link 825, and the client via an Intel 5300 wi-fi minin-PCI-E card. Connection of this 5gHz n channel is 300Mbps.
What I then did was to put both PCs on the G-band, and the result was the same (good one way>back to master, bad the other>to the client.... with even less bandwidth), EXCEPT that the playback and artifacts to the client when the EMU 0202 was brought over, changed to match the type of distortion I was hearing when the master had been previously hardwired.
???What I'm wondering is if this is OS, motherboard chipset, or router related. Would the next step be a re-install of Windows 7 on the client, another router, or RMA the Zotac board on the client.
Now I'm in a bit over my head. I do have another computer I could connect which can only be hard-wired to the router. Then, I could test with that one playing to and from the other two one wireless vs. wire.
The only other thing I can think of is that when I had FIOS I used a utility to "optimize" my system" Anyone know a good tool to reset this, or if that's even a possable cause of this problem, which seems to be in steadily receiving streaming data.