
Track Rat
Just Your Average Sized Member
I do 24/44.1 for the above reasons. Now if I were to do more classical type recording (which I don't), 96k would be more appealing.
vox said:
True 48Khz is beyond the range of human hearing, but a lot of people don't realize that that's not the point.
With a sample rate of 44,100 samples per second the highest frequency that you can record is 22,050 hz that is because you need at least 2 samples to reconstruct the waveform (It plots point A then point B and connects them with a line) as most of us know waveforms tend to be rounded and rather complex in shape, this is impossible to achieve with only 2 samples per cycle, so what you end up with is basically a triagular or sawtooth waveform at 22.05 Khz which sound nothing like the original musical waveform. This is why people say that digital has harsh highs. Ok, so 22,050 hz is still beyond the hearing of most people so let's look at 10 khz, it's well within the range of hearing, but waveforms at this frequency are rebuilt using aproximately 4.5 samples - still kinda blocky right? At a sample rate of 96khz you get more than twice as many sample points with which you can reconstuct the sounds, this results in much smoother sounding highs in the frequencies that we can hear.
Of course the above is oversimplified.![]()
it doesBarometer said:I don't think this is going to come into play for CDs, we know that. But 24/96 will matter when we can actually create our own DVD audio (and it's not far form affordable). From what I understand DVD-audio is able to retain the 24/96 audio recorded (even up to 192khz) and I've heard the sound is amazing.
Gidge said:if your system is capable of 24/96, it is a no-brainer to use
I agree!ecs113 said:Not necessarily, I like to use 24bit at 88.2kHz, nice even muliple of 44.1kHz
KingstonRock said:id rather load up on rverbs, rcomps and timeworks eqs on 30 channels of 24/44.1 than do 24/96 or 24/88.2
I can't speak for everything but it does for me. I use Sonar with an ASIO driver. If I double the sample rate, it halves the latency, all other things being equal.Son of Mixerman said:I thought that your latency dropped when using higher sampling rates?
I don't think that analogy quite works, Teacher, but since I don't have a better one, maybe I should just shut upWordlength= tape width
Well, play your CDs in your DVD player, and they'll sound better too. DVD players have better, more stable mechanisms, lower jitter, and better sound. And the funny thing is, on DVD movies the audio is ultra-compressed, down to around 384 kbps for 5.1 audio. We are essentially listening to our movies as advanced MP3s, and it sounds killer.Why does DVD sound so much better then CD ?