|
Audio Asylum Thread Printer Get a view of an entire thread on one page |
For Sale Ads |
192.160.103.164
In Reply to: in my opinion, no posted by Christine Tham on November 10, 2004 at 01:23:31:
Hi Chris;
Are you using dither when you truncate from 24 bit to 16 bit?
d.b.
Follow Ups:
there are various noise shaping algorithms and number of bits of dither to apply ...so far, the best sounding to my ears is Apogee's UV22 HR - i can barely distinguish the difference. but it aggressively noise shapes to the 20-22kHz region which may be a problem on some equipment.
I also agree with Christine here, and whilst I would prefer to have 24/96 Surround, 24/48 is vastly superior to CD.
The difference is clearly audible, as to my ears the increase in quality from 16 to 24 bit is greater than 48 - 96KHz sample rates.And I also use the UV22HR dither, unless I am running a surround mix that needs dither in which case I have been using the one built in to Nuendo. That one is very good indeed.
www.opusproductions.com
Multichannel Audio Specialists
plain vanilla UV22 is still very good, the differences from UV22HR are quite subtle. UV22HR also allows dithering to 20 and 24 bits.
Nuendo has both if you install the "old version" plugs for compatibility.
Can't use the UV22HR for multichannel as it is stereo only, so I have to use the Built in Surround Dither.But the differences between UV22 and UV22HR are subtle indeed. Apparently the algo is improved, but I honestly doubt I could pick which is which.
www.opusproductions.com
Multichannel Audio Specialists
have you tried rendering your surround mix 2 channels at a time, using UV22HR, as a final mastering step.you end up with 3 wav files, which you recombine to form your final surround master.
obviously you should only do that as your final step, when you are completely satisfied with your mix.
This post is made possible by the generous support of people like you and our sponsors: