There's no "quality increase" to begin with. The higher sampling rate is
nullified by the CD... a 48khz medium reading a 44khz medium can only
duplicate what it hears. It doesn't matter if I take a 4khz wav file and
save it to a dat, it's still going to sound exactly the same as the 4khz wav
file did...
That's basically like saying you can save an AM radio broadcast to a CD
and make it CD quality. The medium is only as good as what you feed into it.
Christian
----- Original Message -----
From: "alpher" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Drum & Bass Arena Discussion List" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, January 04, 2002 3:26 PM
Subject: [dnb-prod] RE: mastering from CD/DAT
> There may be a slight increase in sound quality because of the higher
> sampling rate (48KHz as opposed to 44.1KHz for CD) but if the music is
> going to finally end up on CD the sample rate conversion needed to
> reduce from dat to CD frequency may negate any perceived quality
> increase.
>
> al
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: carlos [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: 04 January 2002 16:28
> To: Drum & Bass Arena Discussion List
> Subject: [dnb-prod] mastering from CD/DAT
>
> has anyone noticed a difference in quality when you take a CD to be
> mastered as opposed to DAT? i know there shouldn't be a difference in
> quality, but i've heard people swear that you get better bass with
> DAT... could it be?
>
> nice one,
> mutiny
> ---
> Drum&Bass Arena Producers Discussion List http://www.breakbeat.co.uk
> You are currently subscribed to dnb-prod as: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> To unsubscribe send a blank email to
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>
> ---
> Drum&Bass Arena Producers Discussion List http://www.breakbeat.co.uk
> You are currently subscribed to dnb-prod as: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> To unsubscribe send a blank email to
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
---
Drum&Bass Arena Producers Discussion List http://www.breakbeat.co.uk
You are currently subscribed to dnb-prod as: [email protected]
To unsubscribe send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]