flatfinger
Use every dam bit!
southside;
you are in good company when you avoid calling it "resolution". I made a quick note of a section from a very long, most excellent ,thread over a t the gearsluts which featured Paul Frindell of sony Oxford pluggs design fame , . He said the following when trying to debunk the resolution concept/analogy......
I think that where I have the most difficulty in my still , admitadly rudimentary understanding of digital is the reconstruction from the encoded , discreet steps back into the continuous analoug.
Reggie , It certianly was'nt my intention to offend, I apologize as it would'nt be the first time I missed the point!!!!!!!






you are in good company when you avoid calling it "resolution". I made a quick note of a section from a very long, most excellent ,thread over a t the gearsluts which featured Paul Frindell of sony Oxford pluggs design fame , . He said the following when trying to debunk the resolution concept/analogy......
You are NOT losing resolution - as I have said before you must lose that concept in order to go further in understanding how digital audio works. There is no such thing as resolution - ALL levels use ALL bitsThe only time it LOOKS as though they don't is on your editing screen.
All other ways of reducing gain in the analogue domain digitally (short of a motorised potentiomenter or banks of physical relays) will cause more degradation than simply reducing the level in the digital domain.
Reducing the level in the digital domain to even -50dBfs with modern DACs is better than using an analogue VCA.
I think that where I have the most difficulty in my still , admitadly rudimentary understanding of digital is the reconstruction from the encoded , discreet steps back into the continuous analoug.
Reggie , It certianly was'nt my intention to offend, I apologize as it would'nt be the first time I missed the point!!!!!!!







. And simultaneously questioning some quotes from a guy who sounds like he should be an expert in the field. BUT....

), but even if the difference in alleged "resolution" were important, taking a 24-bit value for which only the lower 16 bits are signifigant (i.e. the top 8 bits are zeroes) and digitally raising the volume to "use up all the bits" will do NOTHING to increase the resolution, because all it's doing is shifting the bit values over by 8 bits and then filling in the bottom 8 bits with zeroes. There is no increase in the precision of the binary value, and therefore no actual increase in "resolution" when boosting by digital gain only. And as an added dis-incentive to do so, one is actually just raising the volume of the noise floor (both recorded from analog and the digital bottom) by 8 bits, or 48dB. Only those with needles hanging from their arms really want a 48dB boost in noise volume.