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I've done all 3 - have the original standard 16/44 rez file, a DSD hirez SACD file, and that same DSD hirez file downsampled to 16/44. Obviously the pure DSD hirez sounds the best of the 3. The downsampled DSD hirez is in the middle, and the original 16/44 is last. This has been my experience consistently, over a number of recordings and different music genres.
Ted,In Tyson's experiment you only need to compare the original low-rez and the down-sampled DSD files on a redbook dac and see if there was a difference. The third option of DSD and hi-rez DAC should hopefully always be better.
I think the answer is YES, it's worth it because the mastering of hirez stuff is almost always better than the original redbook, and often substantially better. This improvement comes through on any DAC you use.
I think the more appropriate comparison is between a 16/44.1 file and a 24/96 file of the same mastering.
A good source for such a comparison: http://www.soundkeeperrecordings.com/format.htm
Yes, but we seem to be continuing to get away from the subject! It is not about how much better Barry's 24/192 files are than his 16/44 ones (we've discussed that ad nauseum,...the answer is yes, Barry's recordings at 24/192 are absolutely sublime!! I recommed buying all of them if your DAC can handle them), it's about whether a person with a redbook dac ought to buy Barry's 24/192 files!
It just makes it really easy for the OP to do so. Download all the samples and run them through his redbook DAC and he can find out for himself if it's worth it to grab hi-res material for his current gear.I used to have a Tranquility SE DAC myself and while I enjoyed playing all kinds of formats through it, I found the biggest differences came from the actual master, not what specific bit/sample rate it was released under. I didn't know about Barry's format comparison page when I had the DAC, so I didn't have a good and easy way to compare the different bit/sample rates cause most of the stuff I listen to has tons of different releases and often times the newer hi-res remasters were more compressed and clipped than the original releases at redbook resolution.