T
twangbuck
New member
Quick question: will an audio clip recorded at 48khz/24 bit rate and then converted to 44.1khz/16 bit rate sound as good as a clip originally recorded at 44.1/16 bit? I'd bet probably not. Thoughts?
44.1K has problems in that its Nyquist frequency is so close to the top of the audible band, and the anti-alias filter needs to be really tight in order to roll off enough by 22.05K without affecting anything we can hear, and it's hard to create that kind of filter without introducing other problems.
I'm not sure it is a big problem when mixing down a song. Even though the separate tracks are at 48k, when you are mixing down to 44.1k, you are creating something that didnt exist before and the conversion just becomes one of the millions of calculations in the process.
If you mixed down to 48k and then converted that file to 44.1k, that would cause artifacts.
SRC ComparisonsArtifacts such as...?
http://src.infinitewave.ca/ said:Are most SRCs really that bad?
No. If you look at the decibel scale to the right from the graphs, you can see that the range of these graphs is very wide: down to -180 dB. The distortions generated by most properly designed SRCs are below -100 dB and can hardly create audible artifacts. However SRCs differ in the transition band of the low-pass filter and in the amount of pre-/post-echo and aliasing. The bottom line is that most tested SRCs range from fairly good to excellent, but the graphs are very sensitive to emphasize the differences.
Andy Peters on Tape Op said:JoshSites said:For what it's worth, I've found what I'd consider a credible source for our discussion of sample rate conversion. The book is called "The Complete Guide to High End Audio" by Robert Harley (3rd edition, 2004)...
Yep, in (almost) 2009, his advice is irrelevant, and perhaps he'll come out with a 4th edition. That line about going from 96 kHz through 48 kHz to get to 44.1 kHz might reflect a particular old part, but newer devices (like the SRC4192 from TI) do the conversion in one step, and they do it well, to the point where the process is almost invisible.
That was a problem with ADCs before oversampling, but I don't think it's relevant today.
I wonder if you're confusing advice about "reamping" with a sim and reamping for real. There's little processing needed to simply route the DI out to an amp and re-record it. Recording at 48 vs. 44.1 might offer a tiny improvement at the highest frequencies, but that range doesn't seem especially relevant for electric guitar.
I'm pretty sure the thinking of the comments I had read in other posts/sites was that it was better to record the guitar's DI track at a higher sample rate in order to ensure having the highest quality track possible to feed back out to the amp. Basically in order to give the amp a signal that was as true to an actual guitar signal as possible. That way the 'reamped' sound would be as true to life as possible. One person's comment I read said he usually wouldn't even consider reamping unless the original DI track was recorded at at least a 48khz sample rate.
Yes, that, but since he's looking to record the DI at a higher sampling rate it's important to keep in mind that the high-Z inductive nature of the pickup and the capacitive nature of the cable combined mean that the guitar itself will not put out anything above that 5k-8k range, so there's no help there either.If I'm correct in saying so, the speakers associated with guitar cabinets and such (10" to 12") are too big and heavy to reproduce much above around 8kHz reliably.
I'm pretty sure the thinking of the comments I had read in other posts/sites was that it was better to record the guitar's DI track at a higher sample rate in order to ensure having the highest quality track possible to feed back out to the amp. Basically in order to give the amp a signal that was as true to an actual guitar signal as possible. That way the 'reamped' sound would be as true to life as possible. One person's comment I read said he usually wouldn't even consider reamping unless the original DI track was recorded at at least a 48khz sample rate.
I'm not saying those folks were right because I have little experience in this, but I did see that comment in several places, and it seemed to make sense at the time. But I hear what you're saying in that there's just not enough detail there in an electric guitar to worry about.