
noisewreck
New member
As I mentioned in this thread there are instances when higher sampling rates would be useful. Specifically this was in relation to the internal DSP processes that occur in soft-synths and was not dependent and was regardless of AD/DA process, external I/O or any coversion (such as subsequent SRC and bit depth reduction/dithering).
So, this is what I have done:
Created a simple Reaktor instrument that simply outputs Reaktor's built-in primary-level Sawtooth oscillator's output. I then setup a simple sequence in Cubase going from C7 to D#8 in 1/8 note steps. Then exported this sequence to audio twice. One was done at 44.1kHz/32bit float, the other was at 88.2kHz/32bit float. I then dithered both files down to 16 bits, using Cubase's built-in UV22hr dithering, and in the case of 88.2kHz files it was also sampled down to 44.1kHz (using Cubase's built-in feature by saving to 44.1kHz file).
To remove any bias on your part I have renamed files as A.wav and B.wav.
You can download the files here:
A.wav
B.wav
Once you click on the links above, you'll be directed to the download page for the respective file. Click on the "Download" button. It will direct you to a "countdown" page and then will make the download link available to you. You will need to download the files to your computer (I am sorry for that, that's the way 4shared.com operates on free accounts, and I don't feel like paying for it just for this experiment
)
Once you have listened to the files, we can start discussing the "whats", "whys" and "hmmms"
Let the games and flames begin!

So, this is what I have done:
Created a simple Reaktor instrument that simply outputs Reaktor's built-in primary-level Sawtooth oscillator's output. I then setup a simple sequence in Cubase going from C7 to D#8 in 1/8 note steps. Then exported this sequence to audio twice. One was done at 44.1kHz/32bit float, the other was at 88.2kHz/32bit float. I then dithered both files down to 16 bits, using Cubase's built-in UV22hr dithering, and in the case of 88.2kHz files it was also sampled down to 44.1kHz (using Cubase's built-in feature by saving to 44.1kHz file).
To remove any bias on your part I have renamed files as A.wav and B.wav.
You can download the files here:
A.wav
B.wav
Once you click on the links above, you'll be directed to the download page for the respective file. Click on the "Download" button. It will direct you to a "countdown" page and then will make the download link available to you. You will need to download the files to your computer (I am sorry for that, that's the way 4shared.com operates on free accounts, and I don't feel like paying for it just for this experiment

Once you have listened to the files, we can start discussing the "whats", "whys" and "hmmms"

Let the games and flames begin!

