And ex-Australian captain Ricky Ponting says umpires don't trust technology around the decision review system in Australia, which he maintains is substandard compared to other countries.
"Snicko needs to be sacked," Australian paceman Mitchell Starc was heard saying on stump microphones during Thursday's final session at Adelaide Oval.
"That's the worst technology there is. They make a mistake the other day and they make another mistake today."
The Starc comment came after umpires called for off-field help to decide whether Englishman Jamie Smith had been caught by Australia's Usman Khawaja.
Facing a Pat Cummins bouncer, Smith attempted a hook shot but missed hitting the ball, which travelled to Khawaja at first slip.
Umpires called for a review to determine if the ball had carried to Khawaja and replays, aided by Snicko, determined the ball had struck Smith's helmet, not his glove.
Starc then made his remark as Australian players queried the decision.
The controversy followed former Australian captain Ponting saying he understood England's angst at a costly technological blunder on day one of the Adelaide Test.
England had a review reinstated after the operators of Snicko admitted a technical error denied the tourists Alex Carey's wicket.
Carey, on 72, survived a caught behind appeal and England reviewed the initial not out decision.
Replays showed a noise spike on Snicko before the ball even reached Carey's bat.
The founder of Snicko, operators BBG Sports, said human error was at fault and Carey must have hit the ball.
The flashpoint came with Australia on 6-245 and Carey went on to make 106 in a total of 371.
After play, Carey admitted he'd heard the noise as the ball went past the bat.
England spoke with match referee Jeff Crowe, who agreed a technical fault occurred and handed a review back to England.
But the reinstatement offered scant solace to England, who are expected to raise the issue with the ICC, while Cricket Australia will also ask questions of the operators.
Ponting said the situation was near farcical.
"This technology that we are using here (in Australia) is simply not as good as technology that's used in other countries," Ponting told Channel Seven.
"You talk to the umpires, they'll tell you the same thing. They can't trust it.
"They've got a third umpire sitting up in there that has got to make decisions based on what he's seeing that the technology is providing.
"And sometimes they have a gut feel that it's not right.
"That can't happen. You've got to be able to trust the technology that is in place."
BBG founder Warren Brennan conceded the error.
"Given that Alex Carey admitted he had hit the ball in question, the only conclusion that can be drawn from this, is that the Snicko operator at the time must have selected the incorrect stump mic for audio processing," he said in a statement on Wednesday night.
"In light of this, BBG Sports takes full responsibility for the error."
BBG operates the Real-Time Snickometer (RTS) in Australia, known as Snicko.
Australia is the only country to use that technology with all other nations employing a system called UltraEdge.
After Wednesday's play, England bowling coach David Saker expressed the frustration of the tourists.
"The calibration of Snicko (has been) out quite a bit and that's been probably the case for the series," Saker said.
"There's been some things that don't really measure up.
"And at that stage ... it was  a pretty important decision.
"So those things hurt but we'll get through it.
"But you would think in this day and age ... technology is good enough to pick things up like that."