It might very well make a difference. But it might make a difference that happens below -150dB. I've together with others here at kvr compared a few hosts at 32bit mixing (cubase, energyxt, podium, tracktion, vegas and. uhmm. some more) and they all cancelled out to about -130 to -160dB when mixing 16 channels of channel-unique full-range white noise. Peak amplitude, not RMS.headquest wrote:There are plenty of people who claim to hear the difference, though personally I wouldn't comment too enthusiastically! Technically I would assume that it does make a difference though, or Cakewalk/Mackie wouldn't have wasted their development time.stefancrs wrote: I haven't done any tests or calculations, but I'd expect a 64-bit summed mix and a 32-bit ditto cancel out to about -150dB or so (just as 32bit mixes does against each other). I could be quite off with this ofcourse, but I expect the difference to be inaudible.
BTW, regardless of if there's an audible difference to 64bit mixing compared to 32bit or not does not have anything to do with whether it's worth implementing or not. If 64bit mixing means more people buy Sonar, it's most likely enough of a reason to implement it. And nothing wrong with that imho, it's not up to cakewalk to educate their customers.