G
geekgurl
New member
JMarcomb said:I havent seen an article about a sound engineer using 44.1
If you're referring to what I saw as general consensus, it's not about what I read. I know a few engineers who work in Pro Tools ... they do this for a living and one of 'em is award-winning and nationally known. Keep in mind until earlier this year, Pro Tools went to 48KHz max. And the three engineers I know and talked about this with said they work in 44.1 because the math errors and general inaccuracies incurred in going from 48 to 44.1 for CD Redbook offset any gains in tracking at the higher rate. Anyway, my statements were just recaps of these engineer's opinions, and I respect their opinions because I've heard their work.
Since Pro Tools has been around and dominant among professionals for a while, it's safe to say we've all heard lots of commcercial releases recorded at lower than 88.2 or 96. I don't know if it will continue with PT HD out now. All I know is, my signal chain and skills probably don't merit worrying about it.
I'm getting myself into that zen state where I convince myself this is so.

Thanks for the added insight, Chess. I'm wondering if the 2" tape was more a benefit for physical reasons (behavior of analog signal) than 96 Hz is for its mathematical reasons?
And I agree: there's a difference in what runs through my 18-bit, 20-bit, and 24-bit converters that I have available. Of course, I'm not sure that difference isn't as much a quality issue as a bitrate issue, but, 24 sounds best, so that's what I'm usin'! Difference in 16-bit and 24-bit sessions using the 24-bit converters, too.