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So, yes redbook is 16/44.1. But there are several sources that are higher native resolution of 24/96 or higher...such as HDAD's (DVD-Video side being 24/96, DVD-A side being 24/192) and native 24/96 pcm DVD's (Neil Young Live at Massey, Greatest hits, etc.). Also, many download sites are making 24/96 wav and FLAC files available for download. And DVD-A (although proprietary and not rippable) is anything from 24/48 to 24/192, the majority being 24/96. SACD is another algorithm entirely (based on DSD 1 bit recording, not apples to apples comparable).Those examples are NATIVE 24/96. That doesn't mean that you can't take a 16/44.1 source and upsample (via upsampling DAC) to 24/96, although opinions vary greatly about the value herein (strangely enough the best upsampling sound I've ever heard and the only one where I would say the upsampled 24 bit track was noticeable better than the original 16 bit..is the free SRC upsampler available in the older 0.8.3 version of Foobar, a pc music client). Net/net, it's still about execution. A great sounding redbook will always beat a poorly recorded 24/96, but everything else being equal (big assumption) always try to buy the highest resolution native file you can get....and buy the best DAC you can afford. Sample rate and resolution are but two features to look for (along with purity of analog section, build quality, etc.) so if it's 24/96 or 24/192, then great...it'll handle the DVD-V side of HDAD's, pcm on DVD's (not DVD-A) and downloaded files better than 16/44 dacs.....again assuming all else is equal!!
Ted,What are some of the sites that have 24/96 FLAC files?George
Hello, as far as I know, there is no source on the market that will play native 24bits/96Khz material, due to the Digital Copyright Law.The only signal formats allowed to be output externally in digital form are: 16Bits/48Khz, 44.1Khz or lower sampling rates.