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#126
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I wouldn't even bother opening it.
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#127
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Quote:
Digital stays undistorted pretty well up to the 0 point and then just clips, much like an analog amp when it runs out of power rail voltage. Analog tape more gradually enters distortion but eventually is just as badly distorted as digital. But analog tape overload can be a nice production effect if used wisely on some material. But because digital has not the inherent noise of analog (any analog) recording means, you actually have much more headroom because you dont have to track nearly so hot to get above the added noise of analog. Analog can only match this lack of noise with compander noise reduction circuitry which when well set up can be pretty transparent. But why resort to the complexities of NR when you have a recorder which doesnt even need it? Besides, the common dbx NR pretty well negates the sometimes nice production effect of tape warmth because the non linear nature of the tape distortion (at higher levels) throws the dbx decoder into confusion. If you want to use analog tape warmth you have to use either no NR (and live with the noise) or use Dolby which only tracks on the lower level stuff and leaves the high levels untouched. Over to others. Cheers Tim |
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#128
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Maybe this will help to clarify my frustration with digital's "0 point": my primary instrument is percussion, and at least in my limited experience most percussive instruments have challenging transient peaks and analog (subjectively) handles them much more to my satisfaction than digital...unless I'm "printing" to digital using dynamics processing to try and manage those peaks (and if I were to shoot for average levels close to 0 the processing would have to be pretty aggressive which feels very limiting to me, no pun intended) I have to record well below 0 to avoid clipping and then I'm missing out on taking advantage of available bit depth and I'm closer to the noise floor of the rest of the system...tracking at 0 ~ +3 average levels compared to -10 is significant to me. I'm not trying to argue about what's better, I'm just bring an application issue to the table here that hasn't come up in this discussion that is a real-world issue for me in my neck of the woods.
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#129
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That's the thing. Plenty of people have given you plenty of reasons for this preference .... yet you just don't want to hear them I guess.
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famous beagle |
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#130
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SACD will save us all, but the point is....
Let's do take a look point by point.
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Please show us the waveforms and spectra of a +1dBFS digital system and an analog amp driven 1 dB past the supply rails limits. Quote:
Oh, one more thing overlooked. Digital has the least distortion at just under full scale. All bits are used to represent the signal. As the signal level get lower and lower, digital has fewer bits to work with and the quality of the reconstruction filters come more and more into play. Maximum distortion at minimum signal. Analog tape on the other hand has minimum distortion at minimum signal. Read that again. It is only at high levels analog tape begins to distort significantly and because analog does not run out of bits at low levels we are not always driven to record at the maximum level. We get to pick our level without fear. Simple math... at full scale digital CD have 16 bits. For every 6.02 dB down we lose a bit. This is why I would like to see (as a minimum) 24 bit floating point for a new standard. Then perhaps digital can live up to its potential Dan Lavry not withstanding. Quote:
This is so misleading and not just for Tim. This may be one of the major reasons for CD's harshness. A rethinking is required. Digital has no headroom. Digital is a top down recording scheme. Max signal, minimum distortion, most bits used. Back off a few bits, oh say 3, to get some headroom and you get -18 dBFS for "0 VU". Now you are playing back mapped into 13 bits - count on the reconstruction filters to predict how the analog output of your DAC should be. 2^13=8192 The point being is that you have to track hot in digital to get the full potential. And everyone does. 96 dB signal to noise ratio is math not reality. Plus, when tracking hot in digital you can still exceed 0dBFS even when all your "numbers" are less that full scale. Reconstruction filters have overshoot as a requirement. Take a look here: http://www.cadenzarecording.com/pape...distortion.pdf Quote:
Test - take a complex source (music) record it with the peaks 30 dB under the max (0dBFS and 0VU) on a digital and tape system. Now play it back with that 30 dB made up in the amp gain. Quote:
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Regards, Ethan PS back to the question I asked. Have you thought about my comment "humans know what to do". Any thoughts on that?
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In Sunny Vancouver ..... (Washington) |
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#131
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Quote:
it's just getting better and better ... ![]() |
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#132
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waveforms of.... "an analog amp driven 1 dB past the supply rails limits."huh, Ethan, I've got some of those somewhere in my "archive", including videos. Those a beautiful ![]() also, I don't like using term "supply rail" in that respect, but that is a detail that somewhat can be ignored, I guess... |
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#133
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Like I say I was not trying to be exhaustively precise in my use of words and rather left it up to the thoughtful reader to understand the limits of those words. Regards, Ethan Now if only the horse would drink....
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In Sunny Vancouver ..... (Washington) |
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#134
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"past the supply rails limits" is much better than "analog amp ... runs out of power rail voltage" heh heh...
Don't mean to pick on words, at all, it's just sometimes drives me nutS, especially when a statement is a full of passion and being presented as a ray of enlightenment pointed toward the darkest corners of The House of "Ignorance" ![]() ************ Choose your words carefully!, that's what True Kings do ![]() |
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#135
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![]() We would be very wealthy people. ![]() |
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#136
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Ethan? Have YOU "created" that (specific) phrase or is it borrowed?
I can't tell you how much I dig that one ![]() Googled it and it took me straight back over here ...heh heh ![]() |
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#137
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Yeah, I know what you mean, but it's not 100% so, not even close.
Well, it's not a serious part of "discussion" though ...(did I just say "discussion" ??? )Hey, Hey! Choose your words carefully, Spartan! ![]() |
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#138
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#139
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Borrowed
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The original phrase is quite old of course. http://www.phrases.org.uk/meanings/y...-to-water.html I guess I did originate this specific phrase "if only the horse would drink". Regards, Ethan
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In Sunny Vancouver ..... (Washington) |
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#141
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![]() May I try my version, which is a bit (or a lot ) more "encoded", here:"Molly said: "No." ![]() |
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#142
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Maybe analog tape handles the transients better for you because you like the way it modifies percussive sounds. Many people still do, including those with top digital recording gear. Earlier this year I serviced a 1/2" 8 track machine for a guy with a very well equipped home studio. He prefers to track his drum kit to analog tape. At 24 bits ( today a common level for even home digital recording) the digital quantisation noise is well below the best analog converter noise and so is inaudible. Again, no need to record as hot as with analog. But again if you prefer the hot analog tape sound with drums, you're in good company. Many do. Cheers Tim |
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#143
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Some people still use analog tape for all sorts of reasons, and yes, many of those reasons, some serious, some perhaps trivial, have been listed here. I dont question that. Again, I was trying to correct misinformation about digital. In any case, if your reason for still using analog tape is due to wrong information about digital, no one's going to come to your home and order you to stop using analog. It's a free country. Cheers Tim |
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#144
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Quote:
Quote:
******************* Quote:
!!!!! Here's what he said: 1. most percussive instruments have challenging transient peaks 2. analog (subjectively) handles transient peaks much more to my satisfaction than digital... He is talking about "HANDLING transient peaks!!!!!!!" There's no freaking "SOUND" per say past the microphone. Acoustic Transient (as component of an acoustic sound) > MICROPHONE > Voltage Spike (as component of AC electrical signal). Roughly speaking, In the "system" as a compnent of AC electrical signal (NOT the SOUND!) they (transient peaks, that is) prety much are nothing more and nothing less than voltage spikes, and they have to be dealt with - HANDLED that is. It has nothing to do with "modification of sound" by analog tape. oh, boy.... ![]() |
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#145
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BTW, the EAR dealing with transients all the time and does it very well. If it was not, then all you would hear from a low energy source - clicks and scratches and from a high enregy source you would not hear a thing, but rather feel needle sharp pain.
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#146
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[QUOTE=evm1024;3248743]
Test - take a complex source (music) record it with the peaks 30 dB under the max (0dBFS and 0VU) on a digital and tape system. Now play it back with that 30 dB made up in the amp gain. [QUOTE] Ethan, I wont try and comment on all you said but since you are focussing in on real world results and only on signal to noise/distortion issues here, the above seems a good test as you say. What is the standard of the analog recorder, the digital recorder? For analog, what sort of tape, at what flux level for 0VU, which track width, which tape speed? NR or not? Which type of NR? For digital, which bit rate? Which converters? Cheers Tim |
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