24/96khz
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- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 1580 posts since 22 Apr, 2011 from The House of Zaid
Question though:
Will I have trouble running drum samples that are 44.1?
Will I have trouble running drum samples that are 44.1?
Has anybody ever really been far even as decided to use even go want to do look more like?
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- KVRian
- 806 posts since 21 Sep, 2008
Depends, if you mean triggering I don't bother as I'm not triggering 100% and in the blend it sound ok.@midnight wrote:Question though:
Will I have trouble running drum samples that are 44.1?
If you mean virtua instruments than some samplers work better than the other, so I usually create parts in whatever the native rate of the samples is and then convert them offline.
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Dean Aka Nekro Dean Aka Nekro https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=162100
- KVRAF
- 6178 posts since 4 Oct, 2007 from Escaped At Last
@midnight wrote:As of today I am now in the land of 96khz. Already everything is sounding more open and airy, crisp analog round fat gooey goodness.
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- KVRAF
- 2236 posts since 25 Dec, 2005
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- KVRAF
- 42529 posts since 21 Dec, 2005
Now we all know cables, samplerates, higher fidelity/better sound, soundcards all sound the same! (extreme sarcasm)
I did some experimenting with sample rates after the clean install on my main computer here, and it's mixed results. With bass (not surprisingly) 48k sounds better than 44.1k. Guitar is stranger as 48k sound "fizzier" with amp sims.
96k is just TOO harsh on the CPU (though you obviously get a bit better latency) even with my i7 860. I guess though with reaper it would be ok
I did some experimenting with sample rates after the clean install on my main computer here, and it's mixed results. With bass (not surprisingly) 48k sounds better than 44.1k. Guitar is stranger as 48k sound "fizzier" with amp sims.
96k is just TOO harsh on the CPU (though you obviously get a bit better latency) even with my i7 860. I guess though with reaper it would be ok
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- KVRAF
- 5200 posts since 17 Aug, 2004
You can try. If this doesn't burn your computer you are ok then...@midnight wrote:Question though:
Will I have trouble running drum samples that are 44.1?
(for christ sake why whould you have any problems which you can't detect in listening session or any problem at all by running 44khz samples in 96khz??? Wow does that problem exist in 2012???)
- KVRAF
- 1871 posts since 16 Jul, 2004 from Deepest Yorkshire
I've mostly found that 88.2k is the best choice if you've got sounds from lots of different sources. It also plays better (pun intended) when you're mastering. I do offline resampling to it though, as I do with noise/gate processing.
I miss MindPrint. My TRIO needs a big brother.
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- KVRist
- 404 posts since 12 Jan, 2008 from Sweden
Mmmm, yummy!@midnight wrote:[...] crisp analog round fat gooey goodness.
- KVRAF
- 26033 posts since 20 Oct, 2007 from gonesville
See: Placebo Response.Dean Aka Nekro wrote:@midnight wrote:As of today I am now in the land of 96khz. Already everything is sounding more open and airy, crisp analog round fat gooey goodness.
Have another person make you do a blindfold comparison. Also compare that with a test where you are falsely told one or the other situation.
Last edited by jancivil on Fri Oct 12, 2012 8:22 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Sampleconstruct Sampleconstruct https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=191286
- KVRAF
- 16745 posts since 12 Oct, 2008 from Here and there
Now you must get the smallest available SSD drive for all your audio projects, when it's full after about 1.5 projects you made just backup everything on floppy disks and start from scratch.
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- KVRAF
- 14739 posts since 19 Oct, 2003 from Berlin, Germany
He has one advantage though: no OS needed for certain plugins.
But one major disadvantage:
Use SKnote's GTS-39, fixed 8x OS. At 96kHz, that's 768kHz. This devil is known as non-CPU friendly (even in i7's) - I'm curious how that one perfoms if used on like... 16 channels.
Nah seriously... do whatever the funk you feel like.
Though I don't see a reason until you do 80% film stuff and 20% music.
But one major disadvantage:
Use SKnote's GTS-39, fixed 8x OS. At 96kHz, that's 768kHz. This devil is known as non-CPU friendly (even in i7's) - I'm curious how that one perfoms if used on like... 16 channels.
Nah seriously... do whatever the funk you feel like.
Though I don't see a reason until you do 80% film stuff and 20% music.
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- KVRian
- 724 posts since 15 Feb, 2012 from France
When using soft synths, 96kHz often makes a huge difference. You might also notice some significant improvements in the low end, right ? If a synth is poorly coded it can really be night and day. Back when I was using Reason (rewired to Reaper for what it's worth), it was shocking how the very same pattern playing the very same patch would sound thiner at 44,1kHz.@midnight wrote:As of today I am now in the land of 96khz. Already everything is sounding more open and airy
Same goes with lots of saturators/non-linear effects.
For tracking (which I almost never do), I guess going from 16bit to 24bit is the most useful though, more than higher bit rates.

