There is little to no evidence (as far as i have seen), that jitter levels that are within reason (that is, you can obtain them cheap in almost all systems) are antthing close to audible. Do you have any data that can tell me otherwise?
No, not really.
What I have found on the Internet most of all gives me the impression that the audible threshold of jitter is not well established .
Maybe the AES has more but I have no access to their library.
What I have found up to now :
In 1974 the BBC research department concluded:
For jitter having a random, white noise, spectrum extending from 30 Hz to 16 kHz, it is estimated that impairment on critical programme would be perceptible to less than 5% of listeners provided the jitter amplitude is no more than 50 ns r.m.s.
Source: BBC
Ashihara (2005) did an experiment indicating that random jitter is not audible below the 250 ns
Adams (1994) states that jitter threshold is dependent on the combination of components used in the DAC and concludes that phase jitter has to be as low 20 ps – 1 ns to obtain signals of 16 bit quality.
Ivar Løkken, 2005 citing: Dunn, J.: “Jitter: Specification and Assessment in Digital Audio Equipment”,
AES Convention Paper 3361, October 1992.
We can see that the audibility threshold decreases from 500ns at low frequencies to as
little as 20ps at 20kHz. Especially when using formats or converters with high sample-rate this will be a major issue.
The digital equivalent of flutter is periodic jitter, which is caused by instabilities in the sample clock of the converter (Rumsey & Watkinson 1995). The sensitivity of the converter to periodic jitter depends on the design of the converter. Periodic jitter produces modulation noise. Practical research by Benjamin and Gannon involving listening tests found that the lowest level of jitter to be audible on test signals was 10 ns (rms). With music, no listeners in the tests found jitter audible at levels lower than 20 ns (Dunn 2003:34).
Source:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Analog_sound_vs._digital_soundSo we can choose,
If we believe Asihara, , almost all DAC’s will qualify.
If we believe Benjamin and Gannon, al lot won’t
If Dunn is right, very few will.
A bit more details:
http://thewelltemperedcomputer.com/KB/BitPerfectJitter.htm