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In Reply to: You might like the S55... posted by theaudiohiffle on April 08, 2004 at 14:50:21:
Sounds promising
Follow Ups:
...I thought too that the companies had decided not to do it. But here is what it says on page 21 under the heading "Digital Output (DVD-V, DVD-A" and the sub-head "down conversion":"Select how to output audio with a sampling frequency of 96khz or 88.2khz. Select "yes" (downconvert) if the equipment you connect cannot process signals with a sampling frequency of 96khz or 88.2khz. ("No" Factory Preset: Output as 96khz or 88.2khz).
It goes on to note that anything higher than 96khz is automatically downconverted to 48khz or 44.1khz regardless of setting.
Now, this manual is a model of confusion and incoherence, so it is possible that they are referring only to DD. But that's not what it says, and it specifically specifies it applying to DVD-A as well as DVD-V. So presumable 24/96 DVD-A and 24/96 DAD's can be output at 24/96.
I don't have a converter to test this, and have simply turned off the digital output.
Harry
Seems that I've read that DVD-A allows for the output at higher sample/bit rates as an OPTION to the authors. Meaning, most big studio DVD-As apply the downconversion automatically as a form of content-protection. I don't know if this is a feature of DVD-A or MLP. I do know that the only DVD-A disc I have that allows for the passing of hirez is the Beach Boys Pet Sounds , and even then, only the original mono mix.As for DADs, they'll pass the 96/24 as they don't have this copy-protection feature. Thats probably why more studios haven't embraced the format.
My question is, does your player output the upsampled CD info at the higher rates?
...and thus not output digitally. Only analog.
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