I was running 48k projects for the longest time based on various internet posts claiming you need a higher project sample rate than what you are targeting at the final stage to be 44.1 audio. But it turns out that was redundant. All modern DAWs and plugins do the converting internally on the fly. Unless you are using old legacy DAW and plugins, you don't need to worry about that.kritikon wrote: Wed Apr 26, 2023 10:46 am So 48kHz it is then. I'm not killing my laptop with 96kHz. Streaming accepts 48kHz, I don't use much in the way of samples - aliasing in kicks and snares...yeah, right of course they do (). Distortion, meh I don't use it much either, no geetars for me. Saturation is a silly internet fad that's achieved myth status and consequently thought to be de rigueur - so wrong (no we didn't overdrive desks and tape to get saturation, actually we mostly tried to stay under red lights outside of deliberate effects. I was there when that equipment was standard). So aliasing is only an issue if you're making nasty noise. I make nice noise.
I can't hear any difference between 44.1 and 48 nowadays. When DAT came out it was quite obviously different but since working in DAWs digitally I don't hear that difference, which makes me think something else in the DAT medium was the difference, not the 48kHz.
I spent decades aiming at 44.1 but now at 48kHz for a few years, and Markus has pretty well confirmed I have no need to go higher. Will continue avoiding 44.1
Anyways, as I mentioned, I don't hear a difference in my projects at 48k. And sometimes I think I prefer the sound of 44.1 projects, though I don't know if it's just my ears playing tricks on me because I am aware it's a 44.1 project.

