HydrogenAudio

Misc. => Recycle Bin => Topic started by: db1989 on 2012-08-28 17:59:40

Title: [derp] From: Audio from vinyl (24 / 96-192 khz). Converting/downsampli
Post by: db1989 on 2012-08-28 17:59:40
Vinyl itself can usually be recorded transparently with 12 or13 bits and 32-36 KHz sampling.
Logic and context tell me that you meant 16–18 kHz.
Title: [derp] From: Audio from vinyl (24 / 96-192 khz). Converting/downsampli
Post by: saratoga on 2012-08-28 18:06:22
Vinyl itself can usually be recorded transparently with 12 or13 bits and 32-36 KHz sampling.
Logic and context tell me that you meant 16–18 kHz.


Did you misread 'sampling' as 'lowpass'?  :confused:
Title: [derp] From: Audio from vinyl (24 / 96-192 khz). Converting/downsampli
Post by: greynol on 2012-08-28 18:17:05
Maybe you need to break-down and get yourself an avatar of a cat.
Title: [derp] From: Audio from vinyl (24 / 96-192 khz). Converting/downsampli
Post by: Arnold B. Krueger on 2012-08-28 18:21:26
Vinyl itself can usually be recorded transparently with 12 or13 bits and 32-36 KHz sampling.
Logic and context tell me that you meant 16–18 kHz.


I meant 32-36 KHz sampling for which the Nyquist frequencies are 16-18 KHz. So yes,we are describing the same bandpass two different isomorphic ways.
Title: [derp] From: Audio from vinyl (24 / 96-192 khz). Converting/downsampli
Post by: db1989 on 2012-08-28 18:28:37
Haha, sorry.  I’ll have to hope that ‘It was a long day’ is a sufficient excuse!