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#1
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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Things that I've found state that we don't need higher rates.
First, we have this thread from the JREF fourm on science, etc. with some comments by one of the foremost experts on perceptual coding and thigs digital, a fellow named Johnston: http://forums.randi.org/showthread.p...=digital+audio Of course this was written in 2004, so ther emay be newer info or opinions from Mr. Johnston. I see there is someone asking for an answer to this very question, so perhaps there will be a more up to date answer soon. Another example: http://www.helsinki.fi/~ssyreeni/tex...s-over.en.html Based on what is known about hearing, people do not truly hear anything beyond 25kHz. And even this is quite a conservative estimate, since it primarily holds for isolated young adolescents. And even if some people do hear frequencies that high, the information extracted from the ultrasonics is very limited-there is some evidence that everything above some 16kHz is sensed purely based on whether it is there, irrespective of the true spectral content. As for dynamic range, research suggests that 22 bit accuracy should cover the softest as well as the loudest of tones over the entire audio bandwidth. Perhaps the most straight forward reason why SACD is a bad idea is that it is perhaps not needed at all. Blind listening tests tell the average consumer has a fair bit of difficulty telling 24 bits at 96kHz from properly implemented 16 bits at 44.1kHz. Considering the numerical differences between these formats the question of whether we really need accuracy beyond the level of CDs becomes quite acute. Quite some people with golden ears agree that the difference is subtle. Now, the effective bit depth of DSD is around 20 and 24/96 already has over an octave of ultrasonic bandwidth. Why is it that by and far, the same golden ears find a great difference between CDs and SACDs? The favorite demonstration used to illustrate the extended frequency range of SACD is to display what happens to a 10kHz square wave when it is recorded on CD and SACD and then played back. The illustration consists of four oscilloscope shots and displays how SACD produces a very close approximation to the original square wave while the corresponding result for CD is a considerably rounded waveform which is closer to a sine wave than a square one. The pictures are very convincing and will probably spook quite a number of CD owners. They are accompanied by a brief description which tells how CD loses harmonics of the test wave from the third up and so is clearly inferior to SACD. What is forgotten is that the second harmonic of a 10kHz periodic waveform (which CD can handle) is at 20kHz, already at the upper limit of hearing for adolescents. The third harmonic would be at 30kHz and there is little evidence that people are able to hear that high under any reasonable conditions-it's ultrasound. So is the demonstration meant for you or for your dog? Similarly deceptive an illustration displays a scope shot with a cycle of something resembling a sine wave and an approximate DSD bitstream below it. It is easy to see the mean density of the bitstream closely corresponds to the value of the sound wave at each point in time. The text claims that since the stored bitstream is so close to the original wave, the resulting playback quality is superior to the one offered by PCM techniques. But what this really aims at is convincing those people that have reservations toward digital audio media and prefer good ol' analog. The fact is, the stored structure of the data doesn't matter a single bit as long as the output voltages closely follow what went in. After all, what is stored on a SACD displays little resemblance to the pure DSD stream the data carries. What matters is the subsequent processing and the soundness of theory behind it, as always. Or this one: http://www.edn.com/article/CA276213.html One claimed benefit of high-resolution audio that likely holds no water is the belief that high sampling rates and consequent ultrasonic frequencies aid in precisely locating a sound source. This phenomenon, the Haas effect, refers to the fact that the phase-that is, time-difference between when a sound hits one ear and when it hits the other is one of two means by which you acoustically place its source in 3-D space. (The other means is the intensity difference you perceive between one ear and the other.) The time difference between any two 44.1- kHz samples is approximately 23 µsec, yet the human auditory system can resolve phase- and time-delay differences of only a few microseconds (defined in part by the distance between an average person's ears). |
#2
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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On Thu, 23 Mar 2006 02:22:21 GMT, wrote:
Perhaps the most straight forward reason why SACD is a bad idea is that it is perhaps not needed at all. Blind listening tests tell the average consumer has a fair bit of difficulty telling 24 bits at 96kHz from properly implemented 16 bits at 44.1kHz. Considering the numerical differences between these formats the question of whether we really need accuracy beyond the level of CDs becomes quite acute. Except that your dude, jj says this in the very thread that you noted: "Is 16/44 enough? Not clear, and maybe not". |
#3
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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![]() "dave weil" wrote in message ... On Thu, 23 Mar 2006 02:22:21 GMT, wrote: Perhaps the most straight forward reason why SACD is a bad idea is that it is perhaps not needed at all. Blind listening tests tell the average consumer has a fair bit of difficulty telling 24 bits at 96kHz from properly implemented 16 bits at 44.1kHz. Considering the numerical differences between these formats the question of whether we really need accuracy beyond the level of CDs becomes quite acute. Except that your dude, jj says this in the very thread that you noted: "Is 16/44 enough? Not clear, and maybe not". Which is precisely why I also noted that the thread was from 2004, and that maybe there was new better info. It is certain that it is not enough if you want to do any noise shaping or any sort of tweaking, for that you need a higher rate as has been noted elsewhere, but it is not by any means certain or even likely that 16/44 is insufficient for transparent playback of CD's at home. |
#4
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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wrote in message
ink.net "dave weil" wrote in message ... On Thu, 23 Mar 2006 02:22:21 GMT, wrote: Perhaps the most straight forward reason why SACD is a bad idea is that it is perhaps not needed at all. Blind listening tests tell the average consumer has a fair bit of difficulty telling 24 bits at 96kHz from properly implemented 16 bits at 44.1kHz. Considering the numerical differences between these formats the question of whether we really need accuracy beyond the level of CDs becomes quite acute. Except that your dude, jj says this in the very thread that you noted: "Is 16/44 enough? Not clear, and maybe not". Which is precisely why I also noted that the thread was from 2004, and that maybe there was new better info. It's all about how you read what JJ said. As usual people like Weil and LeGal would like to represent what JJ said as an indictment of 16/44. It's an article of religious faith for many that the CD format is inherently flawed. All I've ever said is that the standard for judging the CD standard should be a fair unbiased listening comparison of it to a far more ideal format, such as what you get out of a short straight piece of wire. JJ set a very high standard that was pretty far removed from real world recordings of music. Even at that, he had to admit that there was a decent chance that 16/44 had not been proven to be inadequte. It is certain that it is not enough if you want to do any noise shaping or any sort of tweaking, for that you need a higher rate as has been noted elsewhere, No, no, no. Actually you can do some very worthwhile things with noise shaping and get well over 120 dB perceived dynamic range out of 16 bits with noise shaping, and in the context of 44 KHz sampling. But it is not by any means certain or even likely that 16/44 is insufficient for transparent playback of CD's at home. Point being that the system's weakest links are elsewhere - at the ends of the recording/playback chain. One of the ironies of life is that several people I know that have audio systems with highly exceptional dynamic range (capable of clean, smooth sound at 120 dB SPL and more) and listening rooms with good acoustics and are perfectly satisfied with the CD formats bandwidth and dynamic range. One such person is well known - Tom Nousaine. You can say that well Tom is getting up there in years and maybe the bandwidth of his ears is flagging. Tom frequently has lots of young visitors such as at audio club meetings - and they are very pleased with the available bandwidth. watch Art and George try to spin this into another one of their pedophile fantasies |
#5
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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![]() "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... wrote in message ink.net "dave weil" wrote in message ... On Thu, 23 Mar 2006 02:22:21 GMT, wrote: Perhaps the most straight forward reason why SACD is a bad idea is that it is perhaps not needed at all. Blind listening tests tell the average consumer has a fair bit of difficulty telling 24 bits at 96kHz from properly implemented 16 bits at 44.1kHz. Considering the numerical differences between these formats the question of whether we really need accuracy beyond the level of CDs becomes quite acute. Except that your dude, jj says this in the very thread that you noted: "Is 16/44 enough? Not clear, and maybe not". Which is precisely why I also noted that the thread was from 2004, and that maybe there was new better info. It's all about how you read what JJ said. As usual people like Weil and LeGal would like to represent what JJ said as an indictment of 16/44. It's an article of religious faith for many that the CD format is inherently flawed. Clearly not what he said. All I've ever said is that the standard for judging the CD standard should be a fair unbiased listening comparison of it to a far more ideal format, such as what you get out of a short straight piece of wire. Seems right to me. I want to hear something played back which can't be distiguished from whatever the source recording was. It's not reasonable to expect any audio system to sound like a live performance, although it might be possible with a single instrument. JJ set a very high standard that was pretty far removed from real world recordings of music. Even at that, he had to admit that there was a decent chance that 16/44 had not been proven to be inadequte. That's what it seemed like to me, it's just that he hedged a tiny bit and figured it might require something more, he was by no means saying it was an absolute. It is certain that it is not enough if you want to do any noise shaping or any sort of tweaking, for that you need a higher rate as has been noted elsewhere, No, no, no. Actually you can do some very worthwhile things with noise shaping and get well over 120 dB perceived dynamic range out of 16 bits with noise shaping, and in the context of 44 KHz sampling. My understanding is that the reason 4X or X oversampling is used for recording studios is to make sure that such shaping can be done without risk of compromising the recording transparency. But it is not by any means certain or even likely that 16/44 is insufficient for transparent playback of CD's at home. Point being that the system's weakest links are elsewhere - at the ends of the recording/playback chain. One of the ironies of life is that several people I know that have audio systems with highly exceptional dynamic range (capable of clean, smooth sound at 120 dB SPL and more) and listening rooms with good acoustics and are perfectly satisfied with the CD formats bandwidth and dynamic range. One such person is well known - Tom Nousaine. And owner of the subwoofer from Hell. |
#7
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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#8
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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"Arny Krueger" said:
One of the ironies of life is that several people I know that have audio systems with highly exceptional dynamic range (capable of clean, smooth sound at 120 dB SPL and more) and listening rooms with good acoustics and are perfectly satisfied with the CD formats bandwidth and dynamic range. One such person is well known - Tom Nousaine. 120 dB SPL????? "I see deaf people.........." -- - Never argue with idiots, they drag you down their level and beat you with experience. - |
#9
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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Arny Krueger wrote:
wrote in message ink.net "dave weil" wrote in message . .. On Thu, 23 Mar 2006 02:22:21 GMT, wrote: Perhaps the most straight forward reason why SACD is a bad idea is that it is perhaps not needed at all. Blind listening tests tell the average consumer has a fair bit of difficulty telling 24 bits at 96kHz from properly implemented 16 bits at 44.1kHz. Considering the numerical differences between these formats the question of whether we really need accuracy beyond the level of CDs becomes quite acute. Except that your dude, jj says this in the very thread that you noted: "Is 16/44 enough? Not clear, and maybe not". Which is precisely why I also noted that the thread was from 2004, and that maybe there was new better info. It's all about how you read what JJ said. As usual people like Weil and LeGal would like to represent what JJ said as an indictment of 16/44. It's an article of religious faith for many that the CD format is inherently flawed. I have been away for months, and do not plan on coming back for many more. Anyway, I just dropped in to see what is going on and am floored as I have been many times in the past when dropping back by to see that this debate about CD sound (and other RAO inanities) continues to rage. Heck, why in the world cannot the debaters giving you a hard time just do a serious DBT and get it over with? Oops, doing that would end the "debate" and the people involved would then not have anything to do. Good luck to you, Arny. Frankly, I do not know why you hang around this group, but I suppose it has to do with you needing to keep your name out there for economic reasons. Me and my name? Well, as a "retired" audio writer I am happy as hell to no longer have to worry about my status or assorted, tweako tempest in teapot audio controversies. Again, good luck. You'll need it. Howard Ferstler |
#10
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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![]() SD wrote: snip Have you done any ABX tests comparing CD to SACD to DVD-A? The average human can't hear sounds over 20Khz so I think the CD is perfect. Just goes to show you are not all that smart. Production quality and recording quality are much more important. As we move to hard disk music storage (for me FLAC) why would I want to increase my storage space needs if it doesn't result in better sound? The CD is not perfect, nothing is. But the consequence of 44 kHz sampling is that 22 kHz is athe absolute limit. If you go shopping for osciloscopes they will tell you you want five to ten times the bandwidth, ideally, of the fastest fundamentals you want to view. The CD is IDEAL therefore for audio at 2.2 to 4.4 kHz. Voice grade-telco-bandwidth is 3 kHz with a 300 Hz low rolloff. Actually, CD does a good job probably to 12-16 kHz which is why a lot of classic pop and 50s rock sounds very good on properly mastered CDs, but the upper partials of classical instrumentation seem sometimes to suffer by contrast to very good LPs. Even though we all concede that LP has a lower nominal bandwidth than CD, it is a rolloff and there is no brickwall to speak of. Plus which many good LPs are mastered at half speed so the cutter head never has to deal with much over 10 kHz. I am not here to conduct an anti-CD jihad or to state LP is a ideal medium. CDs are convenient, cheap to reproduce, home duplicatable medium, you put them in your car or a carryable CD player, boom box, whatever. There are some very good sounding CDs and no one disputes this. LP is in the big scheme of things not all that wonderful. But the fact is the highbit optical digital disk has some very real potential advantages the most obvious to me is that you are at 20 kHz a long way from that brick wall. |
#11
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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![]() "Sander deWaal" wrote in message ... "Arny Krueger" said: One of the ironies of life is that several people I know that have audio systems with highly exceptional dynamic range (capable of clean, smooth sound at 120 dB SPL and more) and listening rooms with good acoustics and are perfectly satisfied with the CD formats bandwidth and dynamic range. One such person is well known - Tom Nousaine. 120 dB SPL????? "I see deaf people.........." Just because you have the capability, doesn't mean you listen at that level constantly. |
#12
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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On Thu, 23 Mar 2006 05:35:01 GMT, wrote:
"dave weil" wrote in message .. . On Thu, 23 Mar 2006 02:22:21 GMT, wrote: Perhaps the most straight forward reason why SACD is a bad idea is that it is perhaps not needed at all. Blind listening tests tell the average consumer has a fair bit of difficulty telling 24 bits at 96kHz from properly implemented 16 bits at 44.1kHz. Considering the numerical differences between these formats the question of whether we really need accuracy beyond the level of CDs becomes quite acute. Except that your dude, jj says this in the very thread that you noted: "Is 16/44 enough? Not clear, and maybe not". Which is precisely why I also noted that the thread was from 2004, and that maybe there was new better info. So why quote it in the first place? If THIS can be wrong or off-base simply because it's less than 2 years old, then the rest of it could very well be wrong as well. Face it, you're just doing more cherry-picking again. It is certain that it is not enough if you want to do any noise shaping or any sort of tweaking, for that you need a higher rate as has been noted elsewhere, but it is not by any means certain or even likely that 16/44 is insufficient for transparent playback of CD's at home. Well, that statement implies that it's not any means certain or even likely that 16/44 is *sufficient* for transparent playback of CDs at home. |
#13
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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![]() Poor Harold Ferstler confesses his lifelong addiction to stupidity. Good luck to you, Arny. Frankly, I do not know why you hang around this group Jeez, Harold, it's for the same reasons you do (or did). The lesser reason is that he gets laughed at too hard on the technical forums. Krooger, like you, has to try to flaunt his tiny bits of technical knowledge among people who don't give a crap about it. The primary reason is Mr. ****'s incurable masochism, just like yours was. You remember how you used to have to get your humiliation online in a virtual form, right? Of course, now that you have your six-figure inheritance, you can indulge yourself with a flesh-and-blood dominatrix. What does she scream as she's whipping you, Clerkie? "File those books RIGHT, bitch!" smack! Or "Did you forget to ink the date stamp AGAIN?" wham! We can only speculate... -- NewsGuy.Com 30Gb $9.95 Carry Forward and On Demand Bandwidth |
#14
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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said:
One of the ironies of life is that several people I know that have audio systems with highly exceptional dynamic range (capable of clean, smooth sound at 120 dB SPL and more) and listening rooms with good acoustics and are perfectly satisfied with the CD formats bandwidth and dynamic range. One such person is well known - Tom Nousaine. 120 dB SPL????? "I see deaf people.........." Just because you have the capability, doesn't mean you listen at that level constantly. I measured the SPL in my listening room during * normal * listening. It hovers around 80 dB, with peaks of no more than 90. With 2 x 2 Maggies of 84 dB/w/m each which makes for 90 dB/w/m in total, that means that my amplifiers have to deliver less than 1 watt on average at a distance of 1 meter for both channels. Normally, I listen at a distance of 3 meters from the speakers, so I could still even use a 300B SET to satisfy my SPL needs. Anything over 90 dB SPL @ 1 m is almost deafening loud to me. At the SR company I work for, we have some line array systems that are capable of 110 dB in a wide beam. Even when wearing earplugs, I ran away screaming when they were tested shortly at near full power (2500 watts of total amplifier power, per side). That was at a distance of 20 meters.......... How anyone could even * think * about having a sound system in the home that is capable of going 10 dB and more above those ear-bleeding levels, is totally beyond me. -- - Never argue with idiots, they drag you down their level and beat you with experience. - |
#15
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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![]() "Sander deWaal" wrote in message ... said: One of the ironies of life is that several people I know that have audio systems with highly exceptional dynamic range (capable of clean, smooth sound at 120 dB SPL and more) and listening rooms with good acoustics and are perfectly satisfied with the CD formats bandwidth and dynamic range. One such person is well known - Tom Nousaine. 120 dB SPL????? "I see deaf people.........." Just because you have the capability, doesn't mean you listen at that level constantly. I measured the SPL in my listening room during * normal * listening. It hovers around 80 dB, with peaks of no more than 90. With 2 x 2 Maggies of 84 dB/w/m each which makes for 90 dB/w/m in total, that means that my amplifiers have to deliver less than 1 watt on average at a distance of 1 meter for both channels. Normally, I listen at a distance of 3 meters from the speakers, so I could still even use a 300B SET to satisfy my SPL needs. Anything over 90 dB SPL @ 1 m is almost deafening loud to me. At the SR company I work for, we have some line array systems that are capable of 110 dB in a wide beam. Even when wearing earplugs, I ran away screaming when they were tested shortly at near full power (2500 watts of total amplifier power, per side). That was at a distance of 20 meters.......... How anyone could even * think * about having a sound system in the home that is capable of going 10 dB and more above those ear-bleeding levels, is totally beyond me. It gives him bragging rights. It is also fitting, as he earns his living these days testing auto sound systems for manufacturers. Including, I suppose......boom, boom, de boom,boom auto systems. |
#16
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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SD wrote:
On 3/22/2006 8:22 PM, wrote: [snip] The favorite demonstration used to illustrate the extended frequency range of SACD is to display what happens to a 10kHz square wave when it is recorded on CD and SACD and then played back. The illustration consists of four oscilloscope shots and displays how SACD produces a very close approximation to the original square wave while the corresponding result for CD is a considerably rounded waveform which is closer to a sine wave than a square one. The pictures are very convincing and will probably spook quite a number of CD owners. They are accompanied by a brief description which tells how CD loses harmonics of the test wave from the third up and so is clearly inferior to SACD. What is forgotten is that the second harmonic of a 10kHz periodic waveform (which CD can handle) is at 20kHz, already at the upper limit of hearing for adolescents. The third harmonic would be at 30kHz and there is little evidence that people are able to hear that high under any reasonable conditions-it's ultrasound. So is the demonstration meant for you or for your dog? Square wave? Do any natural sounds have square waves? Isn't that what blows speakers? Clarinets produce square*ish* waves. ___ -S "Excuse me? What solid proof do you have that I'm insane?" - soundhaspriority |
#17
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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![]() wrote in message hlink.net... : : "Sander deWaal" wrote in message : ... : "Arny Krueger" said: : : One of the ironies of life is that several people I know that have audio : systems with highly exceptional dynamic range (capable of clean, smooth : sound at 120 dB SPL and more) and listening rooms with good acoustics and : are perfectly satisfied with the CD formats bandwidth and dynamic range. : One : such person is well known - Tom Nousaine. : : : 120 dB SPL????? : : "I see deaf people.........." that reference may fall on deaf ears, in a higher sense, you may note ;-) Rudy "We all sleep in a single subroutine". btw thanks for admitting you're doing a review of all those old daffy VHS tapes, on sat mornings |
#18
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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I'm not Arny, so you'd have to ask him aobut any ABX tests of teh various
formats, but I believe he would tell you that some have been done but not by him and they came back as no difference for the people who participated. "SD" wrote in message ... On 3/22/2006 8:22 PM, wrote: Things that I've found state that we don't need higher rates. First, we have this thread from the JREF fourm on science, etc. with some comments by one of the foremost experts on perceptual coding and thigs digital, a fellow named Johnston: http://forums.randi.org/showthread.p...=digital+audio Of course this was written in 2004, so ther emay be newer info or opinions from Mr. Johnston. I see there is someone asking for an answer to this very question, so perhaps there will be a more up to date answer soon. Another example: http://www.helsinki.fi/~ssyreeni/tex...s-over.en.html Based on what is known about hearing, people do not truly hear anything beyond 25kHz. And even this is quite a conservative estimate, since it primarily holds for isolated young adolescents. And even if some people do hear frequencies that high, the information extracted from the ultrasonics is very limited-there is some evidence that everything above some 16kHz is sensed purely based on whether it is there, irrespective of the true spectral content. As for dynamic range, research suggests that 22 bit accuracy should cover the softest as well as the loudest of tones over the entire audio bandwidth. Perhaps the most straight forward reason why SACD is a bad idea is that it is perhaps not needed at all. Blind listening tests tell the average consumer has a fair bit of difficulty telling 24 bits at 96kHz from properly implemented 16 bits at 44.1kHz. Considering the numerical differences between these formats the question of whether we really need accuracy beyond the level of CDs becomes quite acute. Quite some people with golden ears agree that the difference is subtle. Now, the effective bit depth of DSD is around 20 and 24/96 already has over an octave of ultrasonic bandwidth. Why is it that by and far, the same golden ears find a great difference between CDs and SACDs? The favorite demonstration used to illustrate the extended frequency range of SACD is to display what happens to a 10kHz square wave when it is recorded on CD and SACD and then played back. The illustration consists of four oscilloscope shots and displays how SACD produces a very close approximation to the original square wave while the corresponding result for CD is a considerably rounded waveform which is closer to a sine wave than a square one. The pictures are very convincing and will probably spook quite a number of CD owners. They are accompanied by a brief description which tells how CD loses harmonics of the test wave from the third up and so is clearly inferior to SACD. What is forgotten is that the second harmonic of a 10kHz periodic waveform (which CD can handle) is at 20kHz, already at the upper limit of hearing for adolescents. The third harmonic would be at 30kHz and there is little evidence that people are able to hear that high under any reasonable conditions-it's ultrasound. So is the demonstration meant for you or for your dog? Similarly deceptive an illustration displays a scope shot with a cycle of something resembling a sine wave and an approximate DSD bitstream below it. It is easy to see the mean density of the bitstream closely corresponds to the value of the sound wave at each point in time. The text claims that since the stored bitstream is so close to the original wave, the resulting playback quality is superior to the one offered by PCM techniques. But what this really aims at is convincing those people that have reservations toward digital audio media and prefer good ol' analog. The fact is, the stored structure of the data doesn't matter a single bit as long as the output voltages closely follow what went in. After all, what is stored on a SACD displays little resemblance to the pure DSD stream the data carries. What matters is the subsequent processing and the soundness of theory behind it, as always. Or this one: http://www.edn.com/article/CA276213.html One claimed benefit of high-resolution audio that likely holds no water is the belief that high sampling rates and consequent ultrasonic frequencies aid in precisely locating a sound source. This phenomenon, the Haas effect, refers to the fact that the phase-that is, time-difference between when a sound hits one ear and when it hits the other is one of two means by which you acoustically place its source in 3-D space. (The other means is the intensity difference you perceive between one ear and the other.) The time difference between any two 44.1- kHz samples is approximately 23 µsec, yet the human auditory system can resolve phase- and time-delay differences of only a few microseconds (defined in part by the distance between an average person's ears). Arny, Have you done any ABX tests comparing CD to SACD to DVD-A? The average human can't hear sounds over 20Khz so I think the CD is perfect. Production quality and recording quality are much more important. As we move to hard disk music storage (for me FLAC) why would I want to increase my storage space needs if it doesn't result in better sound? SD --- [This E-mail scanned for viruses by Declude EVA] |
#19
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![]() "dave weil" wrote in message ... On Thu, 23 Mar 2006 05:35:01 GMT, wrote: "dave weil" wrote in message . .. On Thu, 23 Mar 2006 02:22:21 GMT, wrote: Perhaps the most straight forward reason why SACD is a bad idea is that it is perhaps not needed at all. Blind listening tests tell the average consumer has a fair bit of difficulty telling 24 bits at 96kHz from properly implemented 16 bits at 44.1kHz. Considering the numerical differences between these formats the question of whether we really need accuracy beyond the level of CDs becomes quite acute. Except that your dude, jj says this in the very thread that you noted: "Is 16/44 enough? Not clear, and maybe not". Which is precisely why I also noted that the thread was from 2004, and that maybe there was new better info. So why quote it in the first place? If THIS can be wrong or off-base simply because it's less than 2 years old, then the rest of it could very well be wrong as well. Face it, you're just doing more cherry-picking again. That yo choose to misinterpret the written word is not my problem. It is certain that it is not enough if you want to do any noise shaping or any sort of tweaking, for that you need a higher rate as has been noted elsewhere, but it is not by any means certain or even likely that 16/44 is insufficient for transparent playback of CD's at home. Well, that statement implies that it's not any means certain or even likely that 16/44 is *sufficient* for transparent playback of CDs at home. That you misinterpret the written word is not my problem. |
#20
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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Bret Ludwig wrote:
The CD is not perfect, nothing is. But the consequence of 44 kHz sampling is that 22 kHz is athe absolute limit. If you go shopping for osciloscopes they will tell you you want five to ten times the bandwidth, ideally, of the fastest fundamentals you want to view. Sorry, but that's really ignorant. Yes, the bandwidth of 'scopes needs to be high-enough to see waveforms accurately, for example a 1kHz square wave is (of course) made up of the 1kHz fundamental plus all the odd haromics going up to infinity, so insufficient bandwidth will "round off" the displayed waveform. People using 'scopes want to know what really there! But to your ears, anything over about 20kHz is a "DON'T CARE". You CANNOT hear 22kHz, buddy. You CANNOT hear the difference between a 10kHz sine wave and a 10kHz square wave, because you CANNOT hear the 30kHz, 50kHz, etc harmonics. The CD is IDEAL therefore for audio at 2.2 to 4.4 kHz. Nope. It's pretty much ideal up to 20kHz+. You do realize that the accuracy of a playback system is easily measured, right? It's ***VERY EASY*** to set up experiments with a 'scope and show the need for the bandwidth multiplier you spoke of. It's also ****VERY EASY*** to set up experiments to show that CD is damn near perfect up to 20kHz+. |
#21
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SD wrote:
The favorite demonstration used to illustrate the extended frequency range of SACD is to display what happens to a 10kHz square wave when it is recorded on CD and SACD and then played back. The illustration consists of four oscilloscope shots and displays how SACD produces a very close approximation to the original square wave while the corresponding result for CD is a considerably rounded waveform which is closer to a sine wave than a square one. The pictures are very convincing and will probably spook quite a number of CD owners. A stupid, ignorant gimmick designed to fool ignorant customers. Obviously, SACD has more bandwidth. But you CAN'T HEAR IT. |
#22
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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Steven Sullivan wrote:
Clarinets produce square*ish* waves. The harmonics of which that are above 20kHz or so are not missed when not recorded, because your ears don't respond to those frequencies. |
#23
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dizzy wrote:
Steven Sullivan wrote: Clarinets produce square*ish* waves. The harmonics of which that are above 20kHz or so are not missed when not recorded, because your ears don't respond to those frequencies. I know. But he asked. ___ -S "Excuse me? What solid proof do you have that I'm insane?" - soundhaspriority |
#24
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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![]() dizzy wrote: SD wrote: The favorite demonstration used to illustrate the extended frequency range of SACD is to display what happens to a 10kHz square wave when it is recorded on CD and SACD and then played back. The illustration consists of four oscilloscope shots and displays how SACD produces a very close approximation to the original square wave while the corresponding result for CD is a considerably rounded waveform which is closer to a sine wave than a square one. The pictures are very convincing and will probably spook quite a number of CD owners. A stupid, ignorant gimmick designed to fool ignorant customers. Obviously, SACD has more bandwidth. But you CAN'T HEAR IT. There used to be a popular demo done with a function generator, an oscilloscope, a true RMS meter, a selectable lowpass filter, and a sound system that demonstrated that you could hear the difference between a sawtooth and a square wave, I think, even though when you switched the lowpass filter in to the scope you couldn't see it either, with the voltmeter agreeing the levels were perfectly matched. It was a more elaborate demo of Rupert Neve's, I think, where he just switched the function knob on a generator after mathematically showing you should not be able to hear the difference. Organ tuners are able to work successfully into old age when most of them are severely attenuated in their treble hearing response. They can't hear the fundamental, but they can hear the beat notes with a lower pitch. That's also why old people used to think they were psychic, or kids thought they were, when they KNEW the kids had a TV on somewhere in the house. The old sets had a high pitched whine from capacitors and the flyback at somewhere over 13 kHz that a lot of kids could hear (drove me nuts: girls typically were even more affected) but (a lot of) adults couldn't quite. When there were other sounds present they could tell "something wasn't right" and sure enough, the kids were watching TV when they were supposed to be in bed. Bottom line, effects out of band that cannot be heard directly can be inferred from actions in-band. Vinyl and tape have rolloff, but not a brick wall. You want a fair bit of room under the brick wall, and preferably rolloff at a lower slope before you get there. |
#26
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"Harry Lavo" wrote in message
"Sander deWaal" wrote in message ... How anyone could even * think * about having a sound system in the home that is capable of going 10 dB and more above those ear-bleeding levels, is totally beyond me. 120 dB at 10 Hz cleanly reproduced simply isn't all that loud. The threshold of hearing at 10 Hz is no less than 60-70 dB. People are subjected to 120-130 dB+ at 10 Hz when they drive their cars at 70 mph with the windows down, or in a convertable. It gives him bragging rights. It is also fitting, as he earns his living these days testing auto sound systems for manufacturers. Including, I suppose......boom, boom, de boom,boom auto systems. It can sound really good, and yes, more realistic. |
#27
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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![]() Harry Lavo wrote: "Sander deWaal" wrote in message ... said: One of the ironies of life is that several people I know that have audio systems with highly exceptional dynamic range (capable of clean, smooth sound at 120 dB SPL and more) and listening rooms with good acoustics and are perfectly satisfied with the CD formats bandwidth and dynamic range. One such person is well known - Tom Nousaine. 120 dB SPL????? "I see deaf people.........." Just because you have the capability, doesn't mean you listen at that level constantly. I measured the SPL in my listening room during * normal * listening. It hovers around 80 dB, with peaks of no more than 90. With 2 x 2 Maggies of 84 dB/w/m each which makes for 90 dB/w/m in total, that means that my amplifiers have to deliver less than 1 watt on average at a distance of 1 meter for both channels. Normally, I listen at a distance of 3 meters from the speakers, so I could still even use a 300B SET to satisfy my SPL needs. Anything over 90 dB SPL @ 1 m is almost deafening loud to me. At the SR company I work for, we have some line array systems that are capable of 110 dB in a wide beam. Even when wearing earplugs, I ran away screaming when they were tested shortly at near full power (2500 watts of total amplifier power, per side). That was at a distance of 20 meters.......... How anyone could even * think * about having a sound system in the home that is capable of going 10 dB and more above those ear-bleeding levels, is totally beyond me. It gives him bragging rights. Of course it does, it means he has a real HIGH FIDELITY audio system, capable of realistic volume levels for anything he chooses to play. It also means he can get the maximum reality from whatever he plays. It is also fitting, as he earns his living these days testing auto sound systems for manufacturers. Including, I suppose......boom, boom, de boom,boom auto systems. You make that sound like a bad thing. At least he writes about the reality of what the gear does instead of the wishful thinking and floobydust kind of crap one might find in some rag like TAS. |
#28
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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"Ruud Broens" said:
: "I see deaf people.........." that reference may fall on deaf ears, in a higher sense, you may note ;-) Rudy "We all sleep in a single subroutine". btw thanks for admitting you're doing a review of all those old daffy VHS tapes, on sat mornings Still waiting for the complete StarTrek Enterprise on DVD. Mediamarkt still doesn't carry it......... ;-( -- - Never argue with idiots, they drag you down their level and beat you with experience. - |
#29
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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![]() Sander deWaal wrote: said: One of the ironies of life is that several people I know that have audio systems with highly exceptional dynamic range (capable of clean, smooth sound at 120 dB SPL and more) and listening rooms with good acoustics and are perfectly satisfied with the CD formats bandwidth and dynamic range. One such person is well known - Tom Nousaine. 120 dB SPL????? "I see deaf people.........." Just because you have the capability, doesn't mean you listen at that level constantly. I measured the SPL in my listening room during * normal * listening. It hovers around 80 dB, with peaks of no more than 90. With 2 x 2 Maggies of 84 dB/w/m each which makes for 90 dB/w/m in total, that means that my amplifiers have to deliver less than 1 watt on average at a distance of 1 meter for both channels. Normally, I listen at a distance of 3 meters from the speakers, so I could still even use a 300B SET to satisfy my SPL needs. We have similar normal listening patterns and the distance from my listening position to the speakers is 9.5 feet. The SPL figure you gave is for 'normal listneing,' but thea's noit how I listen when home alone and I don't ahve to worry about upsetting the wife and kids. On rock music the norm is more like 90dB. Anything over 90 dB SPL @ 1 m is almost deafening loud to me. Do you have a subwoofer? At the SR company I work for, we have some line array systems that are capable of 110 dB in a wide beam. Even when wearing earplugs, I ran away screaming when they were tested shortly at near full power (2500 watts of total amplifier power, per side). That was at a distance of 20 meters.......... How anyone could even * think * about having a sound system in the home that is capable of going 10 dB and more above those ear-bleeding levels, is totally beyond me. You're forgetting how much power it takes to get low bass. :-) - - Never argue with idiots, they drag you down their level and beat you with experience. - |
#30
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" said:
Anything over 90 dB SPL @ 1 m is almost deafening loud to me. Do you have a subwoofer? I'm still in the process of building one, with the Adire 12D4 12 inch driver. My dad offered to do the woodwork, but he's too stubborn to admit that he's probably getting too old to do things like that. I should pick up the material next time I visit my folks........... I'll be driving it with 2 leftover Yamaha amplifier PCBs, which are capable of 300 watts each in 4 ohms. I'm leaning forward to try the Hypex UcD 400 though, being pretty close to the source these days I should be able to get them for a reduced price. I know that when subs come in the picture, power requirements are a bit different. How anyone could even * think * about having a sound system in the home that is capable of going 10 dB and more above those ear-bleeding levels, is totally beyond me. You're forgetting how much power it takes to get low bass. :-) I didn't forget that, but I was assuming full range SPL. You'd need *huge* amps and many, many drivers to reach that SPL in your home............... -- - Never argue with idiots, they drag you down their level and beat you with experience. - |
#31
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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![]() Sander deWaal wrote: " said: Anything over 90 dB SPL @ 1 m is almost deafening loud to me. Do you have a subwoofer? I'm still in the process of building one, with the Adire 12D4 12 inch driver. My dad offered to do the woodwork, but he's too stubborn to admit that he's probably getting too old to do things like that. I should pick up the material next time I visit my folks........... I'll be driving it with 2 leftover Yamaha amplifier PCBs, which are capable of 300 watts each in 4 ohms. I'm leaning forward to try the Hypex UcD 400 though, being pretty close to the source these days I should be able to get them for a reduced price. I know that when subs come in the picture, power requirements are a bit different. How anyone could even * think * about having a sound system in the home that is capable of going 10 dB and more above those ear-bleeding levels, is totally beyond me. You're forgetting how much power it takes to get low bass. :-) I didn't forget that, but I was assuming full range SPL. You'd need *huge* amps and many, many drivers to reach that SPL in your home............... -- Is Sonotube not available there? Much better for subwoofers and cheaper as well, not a lot of wood work involved and could probably be knocked in a 2 days allowing for glue to dry well. Smaller foot print as well as no worry about bracing. |
#32
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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" said:
Is Sonotube not available there? Much better for subwoofers and cheaper as well, not a lot of wood work involved and could probably be knocked in a 2 days allowing for glue to dry well. Smaller foot print as well as no worry about bracing. I don't know, actually. I got the Adire fairly cheap, and I don't think there's any need for more than 12 inch in my listening room. -- - Never argue with idiots, they drag you down their level and beat you with experience. - |
#33
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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On Thu, 23 Mar 2006 23:45:12 GMT, wrote:
"Is 16/44 enough? Not clear, and maybe not". Which is precisely why I also noted that the thread was from 2004, and that maybe there was new better info. So why quote it in the first place? If THIS can be wrong or off-base simply because it's less than 2 years old, then the rest of it could very well be wrong as well. Face it, you're just doing more cherry-picking again. That yo choose to misinterpret the written word is not my problem. No, your problem is picking and choosing what you want to consider. You're the one who brought his post into the discussion and yet you completely ignore one of his statements. It is certain that it is not enough if you want to do any noise shaping or any sort of tweaking, for that you need a higher rate as has been noted elsewhere, but it is not by any means certain or even likely that 16/44 is insufficient for transparent playback of CD's at home. Well, that statement implies that it's not any means certain or even likely that 16/44 is *sufficient* for transparent playback of CDs at home. That you misinterpret the written word is not my problem. Pretty hard to "misinterpret" "Is 16/44 enough? Not clear, and maybe not". This is coming from someone who has done more systematic dbts in the digital domain that either you or Arnold Krueger combined. |
#34
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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![]() "Sander deWaal" wrote in message ... " said: Is Sonotube not available there? Much better for subwoofers and cheaper as well, not a lot of wood work involved and could probably be knocked in a 2 days allowing for glue to dry well. Smaller foot print as well as no worry about bracing. I don't know, actually. I got the Adire fairly cheap, and I don't think there's any need for more than 12 inch in my listening room. Not saying there is, but with an 18 inch or whatever sized tube you choose you get a very small footprint, almost no wood work except for endcaps, and the advantages of the cylinder not needing any additional bracing, PLUS optimum internal volume can be met easily, as can port length. If the 12D4 Shiva has the same T/S parameters as the 12D8 that I have,(only they didn't call it that back then as they only had 12" Shiva's) then the best bass will be achieved from a 143L enclosure. This will get you down to 18 Hz with room loading, according to their own info. You can go smaller and still get very acceptable bass into the mid to low 20's, or are you planning for a sealed enclosure? Had I not already had a cabinet on hand and I was starting a sub from scratch, the tube looks most attractive, when considering all factors, not the least of which is low weight and strength compared to a regular box.. Check out the Adire forums and you will find many different implementations and there is participation from the owner and head honcho. Or you can just google sontube subwoofers and find some very cool stuff. One of the RAHE regulars used to have a pair of Adire subs but got rid of them when he got his Linkwitz Orion system. |
#35
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" said:
Not saying there is, but with an 18 inch or whatever sized tube you choose you get a very small footprint, almost no wood work except for endcaps, and the advantages of the cylinder not needing any additional bracing, PLUS optimum internal volume can be met easily, as can port length. I'll look into this, thanks. However, I already have everything sawed, so I'll try the simple box first. If the 12D4 Shiva has the same T/S parameters as the 12D8 that I have,(only they didn't call it that back then as they only had 12" Shiva's) then the best bass will be achieved from a 143L enclosure. This will get you down to 18 Hz with room loading, according to their own info. You can go smaller and still get very acceptable bass into the mid to low 20's, or are you planning for a sealed enclosure? I calculated 130 liters, closed box. Q is a little lower than recommended. -- - Never argue with idiots, they drag you down their level and beat you with experience. - |
#36
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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![]() "Sander deWaal" wrote in message ... " said: Not saying there is, but with an 18 inch or whatever sized tube you choose you get a very small footprint, almost no wood work except for endcaps, and the advantages of the cylinder not needing any additional bracing, PLUS optimum internal volume can be met easily, as can port length. I'll look into this, thanks. However, I already have everything sawed, so I'll try the simple box first. If the 12D4 Shiva has the same T/S parameters as the 12D8 that I have,(only they didn't call it that back then as they only had 12" Shiva's) then the best bass will be achieved from a 143L enclosure. This will get you down to 18 Hz with room loading, according to their own info. You can go smaller and still get very acceptable bass into the mid to low 20's, or are you planning for a sealed enclosure? I calculated 130 liters, closed box. Q is a little lower than recommended. Adire used to have a paper on their website with 3 subwoofer designs for the Shiva, the largest being a 141.48 Liter downfiring (as were all of their designs) box tuned to 22 Hz IIRC that combined with room gain gave response down to 18Hz, so your box is probably right in the ballpark. There are several Shiva based designs up on the web if you decide to take a look at how some other folks did it, especially with the tubes. Good luck. |
#37
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" said:
I calculated 130 liters, closed box. Q is a little lower than recommended. Adire used to have a paper on their website with 3 subwoofer designs for the Shiva, the largest being a 141.48 Liter downfiring (as were all of their designs) box tuned to 22 Hz IIRC that combined with room gain gave response down to 18Hz, so your box is probably right in the ballpark. There are several Shiva based designs up on the web if you decide to take a look at how some other folks did it, especially with the tubes. I used Win ISD for the calculations, and they seem to be about right for the 12D4. Good luck. Thanks, I'll need it (flowers can be sent to a yet to be determined hospital) ;-) -- - Never argue with idiots, they drag you down their level and beat you with experience. - |
#38
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