What puzzles me is that according to http://src.infinitewave.ca the free version is perfect while the pro version is "only good"?kmonkey wrote:Voxengo r8brainbezusheist wrote:not to get OT, but could some one recommend a (very) good SRC converter for downsampling because i find the one in Logic to suck ass pretty bad...
Best sound quality - run 96khz samplerate, do not oversample.
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- KVRAF
- 1888 posts since 13 Aug, 2011 from Berlin
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- KVRist
- 484 posts since 15 Jan, 2009
You have to look at the other drop down menus, the free version only has a perfect frequency sweep but the other items not so much. Not bad though, like I said before charts/graphs may show something but may sound great.chacka wrote:What puzzles me is that according to http://src.infinitewave.ca the free version is perfect while the pro version is "only good"?kmonkey wrote:Voxengo r8brainbezusheist wrote:not to get OT, but could some one recommend a (very) good SRC converter for downsampling because i find the one in Logic to suck ass pretty bad...
Another thing you need to look out for which the charts don't have is the amount of pre-echo a steep filter has. So it will do a nice clean frequency sweep but it will add other artifacts like a linear phase equalizer.
When looking at the infinitewave charts bear in mind what you're looking at. Anything under -60dB will be essentially inaudible. And anything above 20 kHz will also be inaudible to 99% of humans.
My favorite comparison is between the Weiss SFC2 and anything else. If the sofrware is as good as a $5,500 converter or better then I'll use it, LOL!
Last edited by AudioGuy720 on Thu Oct 27, 2011 4:37 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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- KVRAF
- 1888 posts since 13 Aug, 2011 from Berlin
Thanx, lotsa good info though I disagree on the anything below -60dB being inaudible.AudioGuy720 wrote:You have to look at the other drop down menus, the free version only has a perfect frequency sweep but the other items no so much. Not bad though, like I said before charts/graphs may show something but may sound great.chacka wrote:What puzzles me is that according to http://src.infinitewave.ca the free version is perfect while the pro version is "only good"?kmonkey wrote:Voxengo r8brainbezusheist wrote:not to get OT, but could some one recommend a (very) good SRC converter for downsampling because i find the one in Logic to suck ass pretty bad...
Another thing you need to look out for which the charts don't have is the amount of pre-echo a steep filter has. So it will do a nice clean frequency sweep but it will add other artifacts like a linear phase equalizer.
When looking at the infinitewave charts bear in mind what you're looking at. Anything under -60dB will be essentially inaudible. And anything above 20 kHz will also be inaudible to 99% of humans.
My favorite comparison is between the Weiss SFC2 and anything else. If the sofrware is as good as a $5,500 converter or better then I'll use it, LOL!
And a big
I made some measurements since my last post and found out that there's so much room for fake in order to get nice pictures...
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- KVRist
- 484 posts since 15 Jan, 2009
chacka wrote:Thanx, lotsa good info though I disagree on the anything below -60dB being inaudible.AudioGuy720 wrote:You have to look at the other drop down menus, the free version only has a perfect frequency sweep but the other items no so much. Not bad though, like I said before charts/graphs may show something but may sound great.chacka wrote:What puzzles me is that according to http://src.infinitewave.ca the free version is perfect while the pro version is "only good"?kmonkey wrote:Voxengo r8brainbezusheist wrote:not to get OT, but could some one recommend a (very) good SRC converter for downsampling because i find the one in Logic to suck ass pretty bad...
Another thing you need to look out for which the charts don't have is the amount of pre-echo a steep filter has. So it will do a nice clean frequency sweep but it will add other artifacts like a linear phase equalizer.
When looking at the infinitewave charts bear in mind what you're looking at. Anything under -60dB will be essentially inaudible. And anything above 20 kHz will also be inaudible to 99% of humans.
My favorite comparison is between the Weiss SFC2 and anything else. If the sofrware is as good as a $5,500 converter or better then I'll use it, LOL!
And a bigon the Weiss!
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I made some measurements since my last post and found out that there's so much room for fake in order to get nice pictures...![]()
![]()
-60dB of something is audible during silent passages and such, yes. You have to read how their tests are done though to see why I said that. They're running a -6 dBFS sine wave sweep through the converters. A signal at -6 dBFS vs. one at -60dBFS is essentially inaudible. Mix a guitar -54dB below a vocal to see what I mean. A question for people smarter than me though is would running a quieter amplitude sweep result in quieter aliasing/distortion on the graph?
Also what is a little misleading is the phase chart. If you don't know about phase shift and how that works you may think the SRCs that show it are bad. Again, pre-echo (aka pre-ringing) is a side-effect of linear phase filters and can sound more unnatural than phase shift.
- KVRAF
- 8484 posts since 12 Feb, 2006 from Helsinki, Finland
Well, I disagree as well if we can test with arbitrary signals. For actual musical content -60dB is often acceptable though. Even then, if you put require -100dB (better than 16-bit signal) or even -150dB (better than 24-bit signal) those filters are still essentially perfect. In fact I'd be willing to bet Aleksey's target was probably around -160dB or so; more than that and you should be using your computational resources for other things like transition bandwidth or less pass-band ripple.chacka wrote:Thanx, lotsa good info though I disagree on the anything below -60dB being inaudible.AudioGuy720 wrote:You have to look at the other drop down menus, the free version only has a perfect frequency sweep but the other items no so much. Not bad though, like I said before charts/graphs may show something but may sound great.chacka wrote:What puzzles me is that according to http://src.infinitewave.ca the free version is perfect while the pro version is "only good"?kmonkey wrote:Voxengo r8brainbezusheist wrote:not to get OT, but could some one recommend a (very) good SRC converter for downsampling because i find the one in Logic to suck ass pretty bad...
Another thing you need to look out for which the charts don't have is the amount of pre-echo a steep filter has. So it will do a nice clean frequency sweep but it will add other artifacts like a linear phase equalizer.
When looking at the infinitewave charts bear in mind what you're looking at. Anything under -60dB will be essentially inaudible. And anything above 20 kHz will also be inaudible to 99% of humans.
My favorite comparison is between the Weiss SFC2 and anything else. If the sofrware is as good as a $5,500 converter or better then I'll use it, LOL!
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- KVRAF
- 1888 posts since 13 Aug, 2011 from Berlin
You have to take frequencies into concideration: The masking effect is heavily frequency dependant.AudioGuy720 wrote:-60dB of something is audible during silent passages and such, yes. You have to read how their tests are done though to see why I said that. They're running a -6 dBFS sine wave sweep through the converters. A signal at -6 dBFS vs. one at -60dBFS is essentially inaudible. Mix a guitar -54dB below a vocal to see what I mean.
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- KVRAF
- 1888 posts since 13 Aug, 2011 from Berlin
Absolutely agreed!mystran wrote:Well, I disagree as well if we can test with arbitrary signals. For actual musical content -60dB is often acceptable though. Even then, if you put require -100dB (better than 16-bit signal) or even -150dB (better than 24-bit signal) those filters are still essentially perfect. In fact I'd be willing to bet Aleksey's target was probably around -160dB or so; more than that and you should be using your computational resources for other things like transition bandwidth or less pass-band ripple.
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- KVRist
- 333 posts since 15 Jul, 2007
Place a comma after an interjection.khanyz wrote:No it's crazy to accept the degradation of language.
"It's" is a contraction for "it is". You're looking for "its", a pronoun signifying possession. You used it correctly in your first sentence.khanyz wrote:I did mention it's true meaning,
The pronoun "it" used in this context contravenes proper sentence syntax. A better choice is "is", the singular present indicative of "be".khanyz wrote:which of course it always third on the list.
Here's a corrected version of your statement:
Just messing with you.No, it's crazy to accept the degradation of language. I did mention its true meaning, which of course is always third on the list.
(Note that despite being an American, I prefer the British method for comma placement outside of quotes.)
Speaking on your actual point, you should recognize that many scientific terms wouldn't actually be scientific terms without those third/fourth/fifth/etc. entries.
Also, equating polysemy/semantic change with language degradation is an assailment of the nature of language as we've always known it. While I agree that sudden, radical changes to (or reinterpretations of) our lexicon could lead to a massive communication breakdown, I don't view this particular use of "virtue" as a threat.
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- KVRist
- 484 posts since 15 Jan, 2009
Run a full mastered mix against a vocal -60 dB under its peak. Barely if at all perceptible IMHO. We'll have to agree to disagree then on this.chacka wrote:You have to take frequencies into concideration: The masking effect is heavily frequency dependant.AudioGuy720 wrote:-60dB of something is audible during silent passages and such, yes. You have to read how their tests are done though to see why I said that. They're running a -6 dBFS sine wave sweep through the converters. A signal at -6 dBFS vs. one at -60dBFS is essentially inaudible. Mix a guitar -54dB below a vocal to see what I mean.
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- KVRAF
- 1888 posts since 13 Aug, 2011 from Berlin
We wouldn't have to disagree if I would get my point across. Please check this:AudioGuy720 wrote:Run a full mastered mix against a vocal -60 dB under its peak. Barely if at all perceptible IMHO. We'll have to agree to disagree then on this.chacka wrote:You have to take frequencies into concideration: The masking effect is heavily frequency dependant.AudioGuy720 wrote:-60dB of something is audible during silent passages and such, yes. You have to read how their tests are done though to see why I said that. They're running a -6 dBFS sine wave sweep through the converters. A signal at -6 dBFS vs. one at -60dBFS is essentially inaudible. Mix a guitar -54dB below a vocal to see what I mean.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auditory_masking
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- KVRAF
- 14739 posts since 19 Oct, 2003 from Berlin, Germany
Looking a the Wess SFC2 and the comparisions form that page, I must say that pretty much EVERYTHING is better.AudioGuy720 wrote:My favorite comparison is between the Weiss SFC2 and anything else. If the sofrware is as good as a $5,500 converter or better then I'll use it, LOL!
I use Audiomove for quite a while now for both upsampling and downsampling (48kHz zo 44kHz). Personally I think it's the best tool in my equipment in that particular section. Never liked Wavelab for that purpose other than it's included Apogee Dither/Noiseshaper for 44/16 finalising - which however only takes care of the bitrate, not the SRC.
EDIT:
Stuck keys...
Last edited by Compyfox on Thu Oct 27, 2011 8:23 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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- KVRist
- 434 posts since 22 Nov, 2010 from Argentina
When i gave a look at this thread a few days ago, with no answers i thought "whoa, this ppl already grew up past all these sound quality endless discussions"
And here i am, 12 pages after lol
And here i am, 12 pages after lol
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- KVRAF
- 1888 posts since 13 Aug, 2011 from Berlin
Well, epic fail then. But thanx for letting me know.The Chubu wrote:When i gave a look at this thread a few days ago, with no answers i thought "whoa, this ppl already grew up past all these sound quality endless discussions"
And here i am, 12 pages after lol
- KVRist
- 34 posts since 10 Jul, 2003
It is shown in the "Impulse" chart.AudioGuy720 wrote:Another thing you need to look out for which the charts don't have is the amount of pre-echo a steep filter has.
I'd put it differently: Weiss SFC2 is quite good, just as most other tested converters. This is stated in the FAQ section of the site.Compyfox wrote:Looking a the Wess SFC2 and the comparisions form that page, I must say that pretty much EVERYTHING is better.
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- KVRAF
- 14739 posts since 19 Oct, 2003 from Berlin, Germany
Actually, according to the FAQ they use the Izotope RX2 (Adv2) as reference. People even bragged on why it is among "the best" and why one of the founders works for Izotope (aka the bias comment).
To my understanding, the less "blue" is on the sweep plot, the better. And here, the Weiss SFC2 IMO fails. Also with the transition and the 1kHz tone comparision.
But then again - what do I know, I'm just a normal "audio guy".
To my understanding, the less "blue" is on the sweep plot, the better. And here, the Weiss SFC2 IMO fails. Also with the transition and the 1kHz tone comparision.
But then again - what do I know, I'm just a normal "audio guy".
