@Jack Yaz is the 3rd carrier of this ball since 2015 by my account
https://www.snbforums.com/threads/ntp-daemon-for-asuswrt-merlin.28041/ and I've been looking for posts I made back then with links that explain it better than it seems I'm currently able to, but I've failed.
I'll take credit/blame for being the sh!t disturber here. we're talking absolute and relative times, and ntpMerlin relays an absolute time reference to clients for them to get in line with by adjusting their relative time to. I'm not saying crystals on various mobos sync like the metronomes in that video (they might - I'm not sure someone has ever looked. if the routers ran on AC, they would probably follow the power frequency or a multiple of it), I'm saying the various operating systems/devices look to ntp for their own "I'm early/late" internal check and pull themselves into lockstep with others on the network
In my day job, with a bunch of unrelated clocks freewheeling to no absolute time reference - or to the one they determine to be their own - bad things happen (see an earlier reference to a video/television example w/r/t my handle here - eyes seeing lips not matching what ears are hearing them say - and that's just the tip of the iceberg: piccolos can be made to sound like stuttering clarinets, or cellos like violins, or sopranos like baritones when my world isn't syncing). When all of those outlier clocks follow a master, the systems become cohesive and those problems cease to exist/occur.
It works. Router follows timesource and broadcasts it locally for devices on LAN to line up to/with. small nudges to those clocks keep everything flowing
without needing significant correction, and thats what smooths or makes things seem snappier or "faster" after our routers "settle in"
ntpMerlin surveys various external time sources designed and proven to be ridiculously accurate, adjusts itself to be in line with the one that it has the tightest communication with, and broadcasts that reference locally for the devices on the network to follow...
@L&LD 's clients are seeing/feeling/experiencing this, because suddenly the devices on their networks arent having to slew and pull themselves up/down/allroundthetown
as far to fall in line with each other to line up with the bucket brigade of data flowing into, out of and within the network as established by the router.
I'ver agonized long enough over posting this reply. shag it.