W
Walter Tore
New member
I have a delta 1010 and can record at these rates. Could anyone give a basic breakdown of how the sound quality of each rate differs, and hard drive use differs with each? Thanks! Walter
Walter Tore said:I have a delta 1010 and can record at these rates. Could anyone give a basic breakdown of how the sound quality of each rate differs, and hard drive use differs with each? Thanks! Walter
Farview said:The difference between 16 bit and 24 bit is pretty big. Most DAWs do all the processing at 32 bit, storing at 32 bit means that the DAw doesn't have to convert on the fly. However, your hard drive has to work harder. I just store at 24 bit.
There's an 8 where there ought to be a 7.typo in the second example ...
altiris said:Since your on this subject; I've never heard anyone mention 32bit 96k sample rate. Is there a reason for that? I mostly here 24 96 but not 32 96.
amoeba said:There's an 8 where there ought to be a 7.
(Back on topic) Walter, you really want to use the 24-bit mode of your 1010 if at all possible, rather than the 16-bit mode. This allows you to record at more conservative levels without sacrificing quality. You get shedloads of extra headroom and don't need to worry so much about clipping. Then you can control the dynamics at the mixing stage instead of at the tracking stage.
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Walter Tore said:Will that mean better sound quality in the finished product? I recorded last night at 24 bit, and it sounded deeper than 16 bit recordings I have been doing for the past 2 years, but to burn it to cd, via my nero program, I had to convert the wave file to 16 bit. Can you burn a cd at 24 bit? Thanks everyone! I am learning. Walter
Chris Shaeffer said:You can't burn to a regular audio cd at 24 bits. CD's are 16/44.1, period.
The higher the quality of the tracks that your feed the finaly 16/44.1 mix, though, the better it will sound.
-Chris
Chris Shaeffer said:Walter, if you don't know what dithering is already look into it. Its the highest quality way to reduce bit depth. You may want to figure out if your current conversion process includes dither and figure out how to add it if it doesn't. Chopping a 24 bit mix down to 16 bits doesn't work all that well.
-Chris
So what about DVD? my DVD player has 24/96 on the DVD tray. If you burn a CD or DVD at that (thats if the software permits you) will the DVD player play it? I cant try it for testing since my DVD player is old and cant read disks I burn. Thats another thing. If it says 24/96 I asume DVD movies audio is at that rate cause it just sounds so much better than an audio cd which is 16/44.Chris Shaeffer said:You can't burn to a regular audio cd at 24 bits. CD's are 16/44.1, period.
The higher the quality of the tracks that your feed the finaly 16/44.1 mix, though, the better it will sound.
-Chris