Lowpass wrote:Macc wrote:sun_in_aquarius wrote:from what i know if u write at 48k it will but more stress on conversion down to 44.1 for cd burning so wont sound as good in the end, if u want to go higher go to 88 k because its an easier conversion because its exactly double........correct me if im wrong....
Yup, that's a bit of an old wives' tale.
yeah I'd call b/s too, plenty of people work at 48k and get amazing results when bouncing to 44.1 from what I understand it just gives the process' e.g plugin's, FX more headroom to work their magic?
Don’t go using the ‘m’ word round here mate
Nah, it’s a bit of an old wives’ tale in that in non-double SRC cases, the data is upsampled to a ridiculously high intermediate rate before being brought down to the destination rate. This is obviously more costly in terms of processing than simply going to half, but that is a) a relatively very small computational cost, b) not going to lead to more error, and c) only one aspect of everything that is happening (anti alias filtering being the big one).
But people just assume that because in their mind the factor of say 96 > 44.1 is much harder to figure out than 88.2 > 44.1, that it must be the same for a computer.
Computers are quite good at maths though
As for your comment on FX and so on, it’s nothing to do with headroom (while I think I know what you’re getting at). It’s about relaxing the requirements on anti aliasfilters, which can be higher up out of the audible band, softer, and therefore less damaging to the audio, less risk of aliasing blah blah. Whether all that is such a big deal these days I dunno. Most plugins oversample now anyway which while not quite the same, does have advantages.
My *personal* opinion is that you should try working at high SRs for yourself and make your choice based on that *after* downsampling to the final destination rate (ie 44.1kHz). If I’m making a tune I just go with 24/44.1 to avoid sample rate conversion.
How boring was that post….