AtoDeficient
New member
I'm wondering if there has ever been a scientific study on whether analog recordings actually, literally move more air than a digital recording . . . That is, push a wider range of sound waves out of your speakers. . .(This isn't another A vs.D debate, I'm looking for facts here, and we all know analog sounds) better, but does the science and math prove that it sounds better? . . .
When older albums were "remastered for CD" did they dither-down, or eq out the "fullness of sound"? . .
I'm not a sound engineer. . I'm actually an un-sound engineer. . . Does digital record "thinner"? . .. Does tape "add" a fullness?
Why am I asking ? . . . Because my vinyl and tapes sound so much better than any CD I own, and my speakers, any of them, and I have alot of them (it's an obsession) seem to actually move more air when playing back in an analog format, than a CD. . .
Am I making any sense? . . . Any sense ay all? . . . Anybody? . .
If this was covered in another thread, I apologize. .. I wouldn't know how to search for it. .
When older albums were "remastered for CD" did they dither-down, or eq out the "fullness of sound"? . .
I'm not a sound engineer. . I'm actually an un-sound engineer. . . Does digital record "thinner"? . .. Does tape "add" a fullness?
Why am I asking ? . . . Because my vinyl and tapes sound so much better than any CD I own, and my speakers, any of them, and I have alot of them (it's an obsession) seem to actually move more air when playing back in an analog format, than a CD. . .
Am I making any sense? . . . Any sense ay all? . . . Anybody? . .
If this was covered in another thread, I apologize. .. I wouldn't know how to search for it. .