Hi Pete,
You might be interested in Hans Beekhuyzen's channel https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r_wxRGiBoJg
Hans also has a video on need for 192Khz which could be of interest contemplating.
Cheers,
Marius
Thank you, Marius. Good tutorial there.
I think there are enough audio formats flying around. Life's complicated enough. Flac/Wav for me.
A good day for me if if I can open an attachment.

cheers
Pete
Excerpt from a memo by Benchmark re. 192/24:
Created: 21 October 2010
To S. Andrea Sunduram,
All of Benchmark’s A/D converters and D/A converters support sample rates up to 192kHz. However, we strongly recommend 96kHz for optimum performance. There is a performance penalty for operating at 192kHz. The problem is that all A/D and D/A converter chips operate at reduced oversampling ratios when converting at 192kHz. At the current time, the negative consequences of the reduced oversampling ratio far outweigh any benefits derived from the higher sample rates.
At 192kHz the stopband attenuation of the digital filters is usually much poorer than at 96kHz. Many converter ICs have 120dB of stopband attenuation at 96kHz, but only 80dB at 192kHz. This makes 192kHz converters very susceptible to aliasing and poor image rejection. These artifacts clutter the audible spectrum with low-level non-musical distortion.
It can be shown and demonstrated that there is no loss of time-domain accuracy when operating at 96kHz versus 192kHz. It is a myth that 192kHz gives better time-domain accuracy.
To date, Benchmark has no evidence that 192kHz performs better than 96kHz, but we have a substantial body of evidence that shows that 192kHz has defects that are not present at 96kHz. These issues are also shared openly by one of our competitors: Lavry Engineering. We suspect many other manufacturers are aware of these issues, but choose not to talk about them.
Bottom line: Be very careful about any claims that 192kHz sounds better than 96kHz. Our experience points in the opposite direction.
John Siau
V.P., Benchmark Media Systems, Inc.