nonovice said:
Say top rate src was available would the conversion redeuce the noise floor, and contribute to a crisper sound?
The noise floor (dynamic range) is more effected by bit depth, in this case 24 bit, rather than sample rate. Higher sample rates get you better accuracy and better plugin resolution. There are more bits because there are more sample words per second. More bits overall provide for more precise math which is what mixing in the box and plugins are all about. The value of these additional sample words is very dependant upon the quality of your convertors which is another topic altogether. This may not mean much to you if your happy with your mixes and plug in performance at 44.1.
Its my understanding that DVD audio at 96 kHz sounds killer and hands down beats 44.1 kHz. If your system is set up from the get go to do DVD audio then I guess there is a marked improvement in sonics. If you track at 96 and the final product is 44.1 it may not be worth the effort unless its going to end up in DVD audio at some later time.
Audio may move up to 24/96 someday which I'm guessing is a big jump in quality from 16/44.1. Anything less may only have a marginal improvement in sonics depending on material and track count.
Do two demos, one at 44 and the other at 48 or 96 and compare. Do two or three different style demos this way and compare. Is there some meaningful improvement in your mixes or plugin performance? Is the quality maintained when you downsample? Is any improvement in sonics a result of pushing the low pass filter farther out to 30kHz from 17.5kHz or from just plain more bits to do math or both? Results would be expected to vary widely because of different gear and user finesse. Is 24/96 where we need to be for that next leep in performance?
Gear now is topping out 192kHz but the majority of home recordist record at 44.1 anyway. Gear manufacturers provide a variety of sample rates for us to choose from yet we continue to work at 44.1. Are they trying to tell us something we're not getting or are they just selling it cause we're buying and don't know any better? Who needs 192 anyway? If higher rates don't buy us anything and we are stuck at 44.1 for the very long haul, whats the sense in all this technology just for the sake of technology?
Sorry, I've been ramblin on.
Bob the Mod Guy