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Yeah... we get boxes of tape in here every week to transfer. Some are great and some are good. But all are better than CD. Hi-rez digital levels the playing field a bit. Hi-rez digital meaning DSD128fs and DXD. It's all cumulative. Each bit helps... from the performer, mic choice/set-up, pre, mixing, mastering and even pressing plant. If there is a weak link in the chain, everythng suffers from then on. 30ips 1/2" is the best.....I will have to add that hi-rez does live up to the hype. But, you have to know what you're listening for. I'm included some files over at "What's Best Forum" to show you what to listen for and how they sound. Remeber, if the rest of your chain isn't up to snuff, including the room, a lot of times you're not going to hear the subtlties between 24/44.1 and 24/88.2 or 176.4
For a long time I was satisfied that they were correct and that their study was foolproof.
MarkgM,I'm asking not to start a vinyl vs digital debate (in fact, against my bylaws when asked to put this Circle together), vinyl has its place, and indeed it's own Circle. But this Circle, and this thread, is all about hirez digital and whether the specs and incredible amounts of data involved in hirez actually make their way to a musical experience. Thanks.
Mark, Thanks. I understand. And yes, more than a few folks have told me that 24/192k seems to be a "live' threshold, where music takes on whatever magic we observe in vinyl, live music, etc.
Excellent points by Skunark.Another one is if our DAC is capable of resolving the bit depth.Cheap ones probably do 11/12 bits accurately, the best ones up to 20.Here you see one doing 70/6=11.6 correctly
Very interesting data guys. This is what I wanted to hear. I started the thread for the sake of education (mine) and chose a slightly inflammatory title to stimulate discussion on the pros and cons.Mark, I really appreciated the data on analog and human hearing. I did in fact tilt things towards an analog vs digital discussion with my references to master tape. I am still awaiting a tape head to chime in who still actively uses tape but also dabbles in hi rez.So, 24/192 sounds like the veil between digital and analog sound. Has anyone experienced even higher resolution content in their systems?
I have a little tutorial set up over at "What's Best Forum" where I show you can be "tricked" into thinking it's hi-rez.I even ripped a CD, upsampled it, ran it through our Neve console and captured in hi-rez. By looking at the FFT, you would swear it was hi-rez.We try to be the gate-keepers on what is good hi-rez and what is not. Sometimes the levels are so low that we have to do gain changes, window changes, different smoothing and such just on 1 album. We've had albums where 4-5 tracks were upsampled and the rest hi-rez. Guess you never know what comes through the door next!
Speaking of the industry... This sounds like another way of saying we aren't done getting redbook right, or at least as good as it can be. I should fall back and at least say that I can't possibly say I've heard how good redbook can be (or at any higher rate for that matter).
There seem to be a lot of points rising to the effect that the world we are experiencing, ito sound quality, is not the "ceiling of the format", but of the world of gear we live in, and the human perception of sound, or that to some extent we are swimming within our own formats and experiencing a world of variation just trying to get them right.