View Full Version : 32kHz DAT
New Homebrew
01-05-05, 12:10 AM
Here's some stuff from a DAT recorded at 32kHz. Maybe someone will find it useful for comparison purposes.
New Homebrew
01-05-05, 12:11 AM
More of the same.
ssamadhi97
01-05-05, 02:46 PM
the tricky problem with 32kHz DAT sources is that their spectrum strongly depends on the method used for resampling to 44.1kHz
More of the same.
looks worse than a 192 khz mp3
New Homebrew
01-05-05, 04:09 PM
the tricky problem with 32kHz DAT sources is that their spectrum strongly depends on the method used for resampling to 44.1kHz
Interesting.
EAC would only open a 44.1kHz file.
I changed the sample rate using Wavelab.
Interesting.
EAC would only open a 44.1kHz file.
I changed the sample rate using Wavelab.
there are more issues than that with the freq analysis
abilities of eac
quite frankly i would not reccomend using it !
some where here there is a thread discussing this issue
there are more issues than that with the freq analysis
abilities of eac
quite frankly i would not reccomend using it !
some where here there is a thread discussing this issue
correct, that was over here:
http://www.thetradersden.org/forums/showthread.php?t=1331
the screenshots in the thread tell the whole story. Since then, whenever I see sa or fa from EAC I don't trust it at all. Try giving it a run in AnalFreq, I think this link is still working:
http://ftp.sunet.se/pub/simtelnet/win95/sound/afreq18.zip
RainDawg
01-07-05, 10:32 AM
AnalFreq is the best program for this, because it can capture averages over a large span. If someone has mp3ed or tried to apply too much noise reduction to some audio, it becomes apparent pretty quickly.
AnalFreq is the best program for this, because it can capture averages over a large span. If someone has mp3ed or tried to apply too much noise reduction to some audio, it becomes apparent pretty quickly.
same with forge you can select the entire file for analysis if youd like
i prefer the waves paz its analysis is based on human hearing
Realtime analyzer based on our hearing, shows 52 or 68 bands, with RMS, peak, weighting, variable integration time, and much more. Built on the math that the ear uses...See what you've been hearing.
:clap:
vBulletin® v3.8.0, Copyright ©2000-2012, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.