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#1
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Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Hi to Everyone,
Most people practice this as a control step, using the default speakers provided with their PC. But, as for real playing, they most often use CD to feed their HiFi equipment. Is there anyone here who feed high quality music - not speaking of mp3 - straight from their computer to their HiFi speakers, with or without an amplifier in between ? Maybe I should have tried it first, but there are a number of questions that remain unanswered at this stage. At first, my HiFi is downstairs and my PC upstairs. Maybe I could link both with a cable... What quality of a cable would be required for a length of about 20 meters (70 feet)? Would the quality of sound be downgraded due to such a long cable ? Supposing that I get around that cable problem, or that I run a laptop downstairs, would there be a real gain in sound playback quality ? audio CD can be only 44100 Hz and 16 bits, while the music I got from digitizing vinyl records is 96000 Hz and 32 bits float. But then my audio card is only capable of 24 bits, so I imagine that there would still be a sort of resampling in real time playing. My PC processor runs at 1870 MHz with 1 GB of RAM. If a real gain in quality could be expected, I might decide not to burn audio CD from downsampled data, saving all original files to an USB hard disk instead. Thanks in advance for relevant advices. Bernard |
#2
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Posted to rec.audio.tech
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On Sat, 18 Jul 2009 19:09:20 +0200, Bernard wrote:
Hi to Everyone, Most people practice this as a control step, using the default speakers provided with their PC. But, as for real playing, they most often use CD to feed their HiFi equipment. Is there anyone here who feed high quality music - not speaking of mp3 - straight from their computer to their HiFi speakers, with or without an amplifier in between ? Maybe I should have tried it first, but there are a number of questions that remain unanswered at this stage. At first, my HiFi is downstairs and my PC upstairs. Maybe I could link both with a cable... What quality of a cable would be required for a length of about 20 meters (70 feet)? Would the quality of sound be downgraded due to such a long cable ? Supposing that I get around that cable problem, or that I run a laptop downstairs, would there be a real gain in sound playback quality ? audio CD can be only 44100 Hz and 16 bits, while the music I got from digitizing vinyl records is 96000 Hz and 32 bits float. But then my audio card is only capable of 24 bits, so I imagine that there would still be a sort of resampling in real time playing. My PC processor runs at 1870 MHz with 1 GB of RAM. If a real gain in quality could be expected, I might decide not to burn audio CD from downsampled data, saving all original files to an USB hard disk instead. Thanks in advance for relevant advices. Bernard I think you will find that most users of this group send audio from a pc to proper hi fi speakers, rather than using nasty little "pc speakers". As for the length of cable that will not degrade sound - 20 metres is easy. You could go a few hundred metres without any problem. Unfortunately most laptops do not have adequate sound quality - they are noisy and prone to random aliased outputs. You can get usb or firewire cards that will do a very decent job, though. As for improvements in quality - that doesn't happen (the old second law of thermodynamics is against you there). QUality can be no better than the original source although there are ways to make the sound "preferable". If you are digitizing vinyl, go straight to 16/44.1, and forget the higher resolution intermediates. They achieve nothing as the final CD format is already several orders of magnitude better than it needs to be. d |
#3
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Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Bernard wrote:
Hi to Everyone, Most people practice this as a control step, using the default speakers provided with their PC. But, as for real playing, they most often use CD to feed their HiFi equipment. Is there anyone here who feed high quality music - not speaking of mp3 - straight from their computer to their HiFi speakers, with or without an amplifier in between ? There is the issue of controlling playback, you may be very well off with a Squezeebox Duet, otherwise you're gonna need a small laptop with radmin or a rdp-client, in this context radmin is my preferred choice. The Squeezebox is able to access audio files on a NAS with samba-equivalent interface. I use a 12 dB attenuator between my Audiophile 2496 card(s) and a poweramp with a 1 volt input sensitivity. Maybe I should have tried it first, but there are a number of questions that remain unanswered at this stage. At first, my HiFi is downstairs and my PC upstairs. Maybe I could link both with a cable... What quality of a cable would be required for a length of about 20 meters (70 feet)? My choice has been to use the same cable-type that I use to make my microphone cables with and solder phonoplugs on each end, screen to "edge" and both connectors in parallel to "center". Would the quality of sound be downgraded due to such a long cable ? No. I have some 15 meter extension cables made with stereo jacks on each end and just using standard microphone cable, in the real world they work well enough for GP listening purposes, I intentionally never measured channel separation on them .... Supposing that I get around that cable problem, or that I run a laptop downstairs, would there be a real gain in sound playback quality ? Generally speaking the less equipment the better sound. audio CD can be only 44100 Hz and 16 bits, while the music I got from digitizing vinyl records is 96000 Hz and 32 bits float. I digitize vinyl at 96-16, but I sure downsample it after or during processing, often with an intermediary stage at 44-32 and store it as 44-16 on standard audio CD's, also to have a backup. But then my audio card is only capable of 24 bits, so I imagine that there would still be a sort of resampling in real time playing. Resampling is about sample rate, not about wordlenght, but there IS a word lenght issue you want to be aware of, you need to dither suitably when you convert from 32 bit to 16 rather than simply truncate. My PC processor runs at 1870 MHz with 1 GB of RAM. Ram is cheap, up it to 2 gigabyte, in my experience it is well worth it, windows does things faster when it doesn't have to care too much about how ram to use. If a real gain in quality could be expected, I might decide not to burn audio CD from downsampled data, saving all original files to an USB hard disk instead. There is a lot more merit to using the highest possible sample rate when digitizing than there is in using it for playback and even with modern disk-sizes the amount of diskspace used matters. Use 44-16 as final format and DO make the CD's so that you have at least that backup. Remember to store CDR's protected from light, they remain light sensitive for their entire life, it is not as with a photographic film that you stop from being light sensitive when you develop and fixate it. Bernard Kind regards Peter Larsen |
#4
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Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Don Pearce wrote:
Unfortunately most laptops do not have adequate sound quality - they are noisy and prone to random aliased outputs. You can get usb or firewire cards that will do a very decent job, though. This is the guy with the Midiman Audiophile card. It will do it. d Kind regards Peter Larsen |
#5
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Posted to rec.audio.tech
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On Jul 18, 1:09*pm, Bernard wrote:
Hi to Everyone, Most people practice this as a control step, using the default speakers provided with their PC. But, as for real playing, they most often use CD to feed their HiFi equipment. Is there anyone here who feed high quality music - not speaking of mp3 - straight from their computer to their HiFi speakers, with or without an amplifier in between ? Maybe I should have tried it first, but there are a number of questions that remain unanswered at this stage. At first, my HiFi is downstairs and my PC upstairs. Maybe I could link both with a cable... What quality of a cable would be required for a length of about 20 meters (70 feet)? Would the quality of sound be downgraded due to such a long cable ? Supposing that I get around that cable problem, or that I run a laptop downstairs, would there be a real gain in sound playback quality ? *audio CD can be only 44100 Hz and 16 bits, while the music I got from digitizing vinyl records is 96000 Hz and 32 bits float. But then my audio card is only capable of 24 bits, so I imagine that there would still be a sort of resampling in real time playing. My PC processor runs at 1870 MHz with 1 GB of RAM. If a real gain in quality could be expected, I might decide not to burn audio CD from downsampled data, saving all original files to an USB hard disk instead. Thanks in advance for relevant advices. Bernard ______________________ I think you're confusing 44,100HZ with the actual Bitrate of a CD, which is 1,411kbps - over 4x the quality of the best mp3s(320kbps). 44,100HZ is the total frequency response of the CD, not its bitrate. I would try to record that vinyl to mp3 at minimum 128kbps if you want acceptable quality. Recording applications also have anti-pop/click filters to remove the scratchiness from vinyl. The title of your thread is misleading: to do what is indicated you simply run a mini(1/8") jack from the PC out to RCA left&right males to your receiver. Pretty simple in my estimation. I have just such a jack handy for entertaining - I just plug in either my PC or Sansa mp3 player and the party's on! -CC |
#6
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Posted to rec.audio.tech
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ChrisCoaster wrote:
I think you're confusing 44,100HZ with the actual Bitrate of a CD, which is 1,411kbps - over 4x the quality of the best mp3s(320kbps). 44,100HZ is the total frequency response of the CD, not its bitrate. Actually Redbook CD's frequency response is ~0-22,000 Hz -- a bandwidth of slightly less than half the 44,100Hz sample rate. -- -S We have it in our power to begin the world over again - Thomas Paine |
#7
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Posted to rec.audio.tech
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"Steven Sullivan" wrote ...
ChrisCoaster wrote: I think you're confusing 44,100HZ with the actual Bitrate of a CD, which is 1,411kbps - over 4x the quality of the best mp3s(320kbps). 44,100HZ is the total frequency response of the CD, not its bitrate. Actually Redbook CD's frequency response is ~0-22,000 Hz -- a bandwidth of slightly less than half the 44,100Hz sample rate. And not by accident. See: Nyquist frequency... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nyquist_frequency |
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