A
AASteveo
New member
You might want to try 88.2khz IF you are doing sound with extremely wide dynamic contenct - very soft jazz or quiet orchestral or choral pieces.
The sample rate has nothing to do with the dynamic range. You're thinking bit depth. The bit depth represents the total number of volume possibilities, thus determining your level of dynamic range.
The sample rate represents the number of data points for each frequency. The reason 44.1 is common is because of the Nyquist Theory that states you need at least 2 data points to accurately represent a waveform, a peak and a valley. So at 44.1, you would get at least 2 data points for frequencies around 20khz which is the highest anyone can hear. Theoretically the higher the sample rate, the more accurately the digital device can represent that frequency and the "better" it will sound. But 192khz is just a pain in the ass to work with and most people can't tell an audible difference.
Personally, I like 88.2 because you get 4 data points on the highest frequencies and it's easy math on the converters to bounce down to 44.1 for a redbook cd. But the more important question is 16 bit versus 24 bit. That makes a huge audible difference and I ALWAYS record at 24 bit.