E
ecc83
Well-known member
If you ignore antialiasing needed to comply with the Nyquist requirements, you'll have trouble.
If you ignore reconstruction filtering at the output, you'll have trouble.
If you use dither, you get rid of quantization distortion and can easily resolve signals below the noise floor.
That Dither Thing - [English] (nice demo of the last point)
This is signal processing 101. 16 bits is more than enough to exceed any possible dymanic range that can be reproduced in a quiet room. 44.1k is more than enough to perfectly reproduce signals with frequency content to 20kHz.
How true^
There was more than one letter in the hallowed pages of Wireless World and Hi Fi News (hallowed then!) pointing out that few people could afford speakers that produced 100dBSPLs or the 100W+ amps needed to drive them (assuming speaker sens' of 90dB/W/mtr and that is generous). At the "other" end very few domestic rooms get quiet enough.
They were not of course to know back in the 80's that 80% of CDs made would have that hard won dynamic range smashed into the top 8dB and that levels would be pushed to within a gnat's boxers of 0dBFS!
Dave.