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...of data correlated jitter. That is what makes SPDIF so bad. The method of extracting the clock contains modulation artifacts that is strongly dependent of the programme source. It shouldn't be.That is why companies have gone to things like ASRCs, to clean up that modulation...
Quote from: woodsyi on 8 Mar 2008, 04:49 pmI am going to be in Monroe for a St. Patrick's day party Saturday. I can swing over on Sunday.Do you mean next Sunday the 16th? I can't do it that day, but every Saturday and Sunday after are available. Let's you and me pick another weekend afternoon, and anyone else who's up for it the same day we pick is welcome to visit too.--Ethan
I am going to be in Monroe for a St. Patrick's day party Saturday. I can swing over on Sunday.
It's the sampling rate, Denny/DGO. Redbook's 44,100 per second simply is insufficient a sampling of the complex waveforms that make up music. Further the very real 22Khz limit may be insufficient, as well, to capture the top-end of an event and record it for playback.
It's not likely the bit length that matters - whether 16 or 24 - as almost no consumer amplifiers have a signal-to-noise ratio of over 100 dB. Almost certainly no tube amps do. So, tho a difference may exist if we can hear it, it cannot be due to amplifier limitations. It's the sampling rate, Denny/DGO. Redbook's 44,100 per second simply is insufficient a sampling of the complex waveforms that make up music. Further the very real 22Khz limit may be insufficient, as well, to capture the top-end of an event and record it for playback. 24/96 or 24/192 with MLP is indeed a very real advance on Redbook...but it has little to do with dynamic range betterment. It has to do with capturing the nuance of real live music and top-end/treble extension with higher sampling rates.
One thing further: If you want to number-crunch, here's some food for thought... some years ago a well-respected audio technician named Barry Fox did a mathematical comparison of the relative bit-rates (information-transmission density if you will) of CD vs. vinyl.We know that domestic CD audio samples at 44,100 Hz, so that its maximum bit-rate is 705,000 bits per channel per second. Mr. Fox then suggested that, if we take some nominal values for things like minimum cantilever excursion to produce audible signal and the contact area of stylus/groove interface, then by the same application vinyl calculates out to have a resolution in the order of 2 MILLION bits per channel per second!
A lot of people have yet to be convinced by the inherent audible superiority of 24/96.
It isn't the level of distortion that is point, but the distribution. Some is euphonic, and some folks like it. Others (like 7th and 9th order) are especially nasty, and folks don't care to hear them.
As for level of audibility, I don't imagine that you ever measured capacitor distortion levels. They are typically down in that -120 dB range. I don't know of many folks here who won't agree that caps sound different.
I have 24 bit capability in my recording studio. I use 16 bit. I've done many tests between 16 and 24 bit, and never found any difference that I could hear.
Ethan,in as much as distortion levels of better than -80dB were achieved more than 35 years ago your statement that amplifiers with -80dB of distortion are transparent implies that there are no sonic differences between amplifiers meeting this criteria. By extension, any component meeting this criteria is no longer a factor in the sound produced by the system,therefore there really hasn't been any progress made regarding amplifier design in the last thirty years. Is this actually your position on this subject.Scotty
I guess you didn't read my posts in this thread either. Normal amplifier designs should not have more 7th and 9th harmonic distortion than lower orders. Moreover, Harmonic Distortion (THD) does not appear in isolation. Wherever you have Harmonic Distortion you also have Intermodulation Distortion (IMD). So saying that this or that higher order harmonic dominates the spectrum is wrong. And regardless of the distortion frequencies, if they're 80 dB or more below the music they are inaudible, period. This is the real issue, and this is very easy to prove for once and for all. I have proven this to my own satisfaction in my home studio by injecting varying amounts of artifacts into music, and I can prove it to anyone else who is willing to visit me to see and hear such tests in action.
Ethan,in as much as distortion levels of better than -80dB were achieved more than 35 years ago ... Is this actually your position on this subject.
My job, as a designer of electronics, is to minimise all forms of distortion.
I know from my experience what point the "how much" gets to the "that's enough" point. That is what I believe the folks here want to know.
anyone who says otherwise is is making stuff up to sell equipment.