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New Midas M32 Console
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<blockquote data-quote="John Roberts" data-source="post: 116840" data-attributes="member: 126"><p>Re: New Midas M32 Console</p><p></p><p>Modern A/D convertors are typically oversampled or performing the initial analog to digital conversion at very high sample rates (and lower number of bits) where there is precious little audio energy present to alias against, so the analog input filtering is relatively gentle. Then the above passband energy gets digitally removed when the data gets decimated down to lower sample rates with increased bit resolution. </p><p></p><p>JR</p><p></p><p>[edit- the higher output sample rate is just decimated down (less). The decision regarding using higher output sample rates is a tradeoff between data bandwidth, storage, processing overhead, and lower on that list (IMO) audio fidelity. Many A/D convertors offer different output samples rates as a basic option. /edit]</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="John Roberts, post: 116840, member: 126"] Re: New Midas M32 Console Modern A/D convertors are typically oversampled or performing the initial analog to digital conversion at very high sample rates (and lower number of bits) where there is precious little audio energy present to alias against, so the analog input filtering is relatively gentle. Then the above passband energy gets digitally removed when the data gets decimated down to lower sample rates with increased bit resolution. JR [edit- the higher output sample rate is just decimated down (less). The decision regarding using higher output sample rates is a tradeoff between data bandwidth, storage, processing overhead, and lower on that list (IMO) audio fidelity. Many A/D convertors offer different output samples rates as a basic option. /edit] [/QUOTE]
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