Which one of those converters is multi-bit?
As far as I can see, none of the A/Ds Bruce mentioned there is multi-bit, they're all S-D, heavily oversampled, noise-shaped.
<edit> Slip up, changed D/A to A/D
Which one of those converters is multi-bit?
As far as I can see, none of the D/As Bruce mentioned there is multi-bit, they're all S-D, heavily oversampled, noise-shaped.
Does anyone have a hypothesis, any hypothesis at all however far-out, for why PCM's dynamics might be exaggerated?
And some would say that your other DACs are at fault, 'distorting' the sound in some way. OK, but when you have the original analog to hand (which I do), this argument loses all merit.
IME, a 24/192 PCM recording made on a true multi-bit non-oversampling ADC (not many of those around that are 24/192-capable), played back on a true multi-bit non-oversampling DAC (not many of those around that are 24/192-capable either!) sounds close enough to the analog for me not to care about any difference that may exist.
Mani.
And if you do, can you then explain why my PCM recordings don't have exaggerated dynamics compared to the original analog? The PCM recordings really do capture the essence of my vinyl beautifully, which is all I'm after.
Mani.
Audiophiles have, for far too long, judged PCM based on "CD quality" which has dismissed its true potential.
tb1
Not true in my case. I own hi-rez files at 24/192 so I'm comparing the sound of those files against DSD and not comparing RB CD to DSD.
I'm still not sure whether you are saying DSD is superior for capture AND playback. I would be willing to bet your MSB DAC does PCM better than your MPS5. Of course they are different price points, but then why does the MPS5 do DSD better than MSB? I would say its partly due to the multi bit design of the MSB lends itself more so to PCM than does the MPS5. Theres no best format for all DACs.What?? I used these as A/D converters..... I never mentioned DAC's
Theres no best format for all DACs.
I'm still not sure whether you are saying DSD is superior for capture AND playback. I would be willing to bet your MSB DAC does PCM better than your MPS5. Of course they are different price points, but then why does the MPS5 do DSD better than MSB? I would say its partly due to the multi bit design of the MSB lends itself more so to PCM than does the MPS5. Theres no best format for all DACs.
And some would say that your other DACs are at fault, 'distorting' the sound in some way. OK, but when you have the original analog to hand (which I do), this argument loses all merit.
IME, a 24/192 PCM recording made on a true multi-bit non-oversampling ADC (not many of those around that are 24/192-capable), played back on a true multi-bit non-oversampling DAC (not many of those around that are 24/192-capable either!) sounds close enough to the analog for me not to care about any difference that may exist.
Not so. One must elect to describe something in language and that requires cognition. Premeditation is a poor term since it larded with other implications.Opus111 was referring to premeditation in the context of "describing in language" of an observation, not "acting in response" to that observation. While you can argue the latter usually involves premeditation (i.e. a conscious thought process) the former in many cases does not.
How can an example be too restrictive? Being an example implies that there are other expressions.However, I think your example of the fear driven response to a snake is way to restrictive as an example of non-premeditated response.
That is definitely learned behavior.There are many examples of unlearned responses that do not involve premditation, for example the reflex to catch a falling object.
Agreed but it does require perceptual and cognitive processes although they are subconscious. Surely, you don't swing the same way for all balls.Secondly, there are learned non-premidated responses. I play squash and hit the ball without premeditation some of the time (mostly the defensive shots). The same is true for a a baseball player catching a ball coming at him at 90mph.
But not all cognitive processing is conscious. That is why this is so thorny.The neurological process of each of these examples is probably different, but they have in common a lack of conscious thought process preceding the response (i.e premeditation).
Yes, I agree & I'm bearing this in mind when evaluating - that's why it's all preliminary impressions ATM. It's also why I'm bringing it to the friends house who has invited some other ears along. He also has an air-bearing TT & other TTs - the details of which escape me at the moment but I have always compared my offerings to this reference & found my offerings wantingAnd some would say that your other DACs are at fault, 'distorting' the sound in some way. OK, but when you have the original analog to hand (which I do), this argument loses all merit.
Yes, Opus says more or less the same thing without the high-res bit.IME, a 24/192 PCM recording made on a true multi-bit non-oversampling ADC (not many of those around that are 24/192-capable), played back on a true multi-bit non-oversampling DAC (not many of those around that are 24/192-capable either!) sounds close enough to the analog for me not to care about any difference that may exist.
Mani.
Right but that does not mean there is no thought (cognitive) process required.Yep - the aim with sport is to enter the state called 'flow' where things arise and we attend to them without any conscious thought.
I believe what I said was that DSD was better on the MPS-5 and PCM was toss up between the MSB and PD.
What would you recommend for those of us who grew up on a steady diet of analog and don't really care for the current state of analog or digital all that much??
Yes, indeed you are correctTo be fair to John, his DACs are single chip 'economy' solutions (ES9023 and PCM5102) so yes, his other DACs are 'at fault' in this sense. As S-D DACs go though, they're jolly good bang-for-the-buck. AFAIK he's well aware of their deficiencies when up against top-end vinyl.
Right but that does not mean there is no thought (cognitive) process required.
The Way-Back machine.
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