M mandrum New member Apr 21, 2010 #1 Does anyony know why the noise floor goes from nearly invisable to a constant underwater like crackle when I record at 92khz, as opposed to 48khz??
Does anyony know why the noise floor goes from nearly invisable to a constant underwater like crackle when I record at 92khz, as opposed to 48khz??
N NYMorningstar Recording Modus Operandi Apr 21, 2010 #2 Because when you record at 92 you are under water?. I know when peeps call me on cheap cell phones they sound like they're under water, go figure. Last edited: Apr 21, 2010
Because when you record at 92 you are under water?. I know when peeps call me on cheap cell phones they sound like they're under water, go figure.
N NYMorningstar Recording Modus Operandi Apr 21, 2010 #3 Here's the local cell tower Maybe your soundcard? Attachments 4129207791_0b54903e62.webp 31.8 KB · Views: 73
Massive Master www.massivemastering.com Apr 21, 2010 #5 Assuming he means 96k, that's a video rate also. Could mean that (A) your computer can't handle it, (B) if you're actually at 92k it might be confusing something that's running at a different rate, (C) your converters sound like crap at 96k (wouldn't be the first, certainly won't be the last).
Assuming he means 96k, that's a video rate also. Could mean that (A) your computer can't handle it, (B) if you're actually at 92k it might be confusing something that's running at a different rate, (C) your converters sound like crap at 96k (wouldn't be the first, certainly won't be the last).
T TimOBrien New member Apr 21, 2010 #6 Maybe because your "Hi-Definition" onboard soundcard with 40 cents worth of chips and ASIO4all really isn't up to the job....
Maybe because your "Hi-Definition" onboard soundcard with 40 cents worth of chips and ASIO4all really isn't up to the job....
M mandrum New member Apr 22, 2010 #7 Thanks for the replies guys, yeah, massive was right, my computer was struggling!