I would like to hear any arguments from both camps as to why one way is better that the other.
Thanks for starting that, Kelly. I was looking at those combinations and had a couple more, but with caveats.
I've seen a couple of stations use the AES in/out of a pair of Bric-Links. I'm pretty sure this equipment (as well as the Barix Exstreamer 1000) does a D/A - A/D conversion, then compresses the audio to whatever form you select for bandwidth purposes. I have a set that uses fiber for the link between sites, so running the Bric-Links in PCM format works fine. Over the public internet however, I have a question about using compressed formats and expecting there will be no overshoots in a processed stream at the receiving end.
There are two other stations at the site I do some work in. My STL is a 2-hop composite, and without a clipper at the transmitter, I have a bit of an overshoot issue (hope to move that to backup-status soon). The other two stations use digital STLs, but have chosen to go L/R in/out and have their processors and RDS generators at the transmitter site. Now that so many processors, remote controls and switching devices are network-accessible, perhaps there's less reason to put a lot of effort into locating the processor at the studio.
I'm a big fan of the Comrex Bric Links, not so much with the Barix. We use over a dozen of the Bric Links for IFB and PL connections overseas rather than phone lines. For STL purposes, I suggest treating them similar to a discrete L/R and put some form of limiting ahead of them and the processing at the TX. You can't be sure the talent or guy running the board is going to pay attention to their levels.
Two hop composite STL hops are a bitch. The s/n is never very good and filter ringing/overshoots is always a possibility. What I've done in the past with Moseley 606 units, is bypass the filters at the second hop site. That knocks the filter ring down considerably, but doesn't necessarily help with s/n.
Wherever possible, I always try to keep the audio processing at the studio. Modern processor-powered processing are in essence a PC, with remote transmitter sites being generally inhospitable environments for things like PC's. Remember hearing horror stories of transmitter manufacturers putting hard drives in their exciters? Yeah, that didn't go so well. The old days of 8100 Optimods which were designed for installation at TX sites are long past, that is of course unless you're still running an 8100.
My STLs are Nicoms, but I'll look into that.