
AlChuck
Well-known member
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darnold said:Infact you are probably just damaging the audio more than it is already damaged by running it through the SBLive card anyway.
Im done with this thread.
Danny
darnold said:That is totally fine if its working for you. But your claim of it being 32/96 is a little extreme.
danny
Cool Edit (Pro only? I've never worked with Cool Edit 2000) can record and save as 32bit from a 16bit input, but any advantage to this only comes with extensive editing, there is no more resolution in the original recording than a 16bit one.
It may also record at any sample rate you choose but this is derived by sample rate conversion.
I can't upload 96k wav files for comparison, too big in size, you know. (the mp3 was an example of the audio quality - Noise Level).
Here is two screenshots of the same recording. The pics shows the Spectral View in Cool Edit.
The First it's a 48K 16Bit recording.
The Second it's a 96k 32Bit recording.
The black sign shows a point where the difference it's evident.
Can you see the difference? The second picture shows a more dense spectre.
Sure you can. They don't have to be three-minute songs. A five-second snippet of the
same source, recorded once at one setting and once at the "magic" setting, would suffice.
That's "spectrum." "Spectre" is a ghost; "spectra" is the plural of "spectrum."
About the pictures... first off, to me it looks like you labeled the files backwards -- the one
labeled 48k16bit looks like it has finer resolution than the one labeled 96k32bit.
Jim Y said:Perhaps there's no need for debate. If you peruse the KX website, you might find mention of a test program called RMAA or in full, RightMark Audio Analyser. This free program can test a soundcard by outputting a sequence of test tones and measuring what comes back. Although it isn't too scientific to test something with itself, it does give a useful comparative result.
Please check my previous message.
(RMAA) Well I think I'll give it a try...
Coming to those interesting pictures, I can't really see anything significant between the two at all!
Look at the circle... The 96k shows something (sonically) not present in the 48k rec.
I am puzzled by the black hole in the 15-16Khz band in both. Have you done some heavy FFT filtering on this? It seems quite odd to have this deep cut in a signal which is otherwise full range in content.
The Black Hole it's something like a "mirror effect"... The spectrum
it's mirrored and I don't know nothing about that. I was surprised like you the first time I saw this.
I would also suggest you try the same comparison done with 32/96 and 16/48 with a 32/48 test.
You are right. I think I will do this as soon as possible. Then I'll post the pics here. (Hey it tooks me 30 minutes to upload the waves above - prev. message)
Incidentally, check your recording software does not have dithering enabled on record. Then when you convert the sample type for CD or whatever, enable dithering for the best quality result.
No my software don't have any dither on record.
About converting the sample type: Bob Katz say that the best thing to do is to leave the file as is... And if you convert from 96k to 48k you must disable dithering... The mastering house can provide the right dithering later.
Audiophile2496 has an excellent frequency response - as good as flat in fact. The difference in overall quality is obvious between these cards.
Ah Audiophile... I think this will be my next card. It's the first item in my letter to Santa Klaus. -3 months to Xmas Wow!!![]()