HIFICRITIC audio review magazine
HIFICRITIC FORUMS
New Issue: Vol 7, No 1
HIFICRITIC
Welcome Guest! To enable all features please Login or Register.

Notification

Icon
Error

6 Pages«<3456>
kengale Offline
#81 Posted : 15 February 2012 23:57:36(UTC)
kengale


Rank: HIFI Veteran

Joined: 25/11/2008(UTC)
Posts: 982
Location: UK

Was thanked: 2 time(s) in 2 post(s)
Shadders wrote:
bdiament wrote:
Hi Richard,

Shadders wrote:
Hmmm,

I looked at the wiki page on upsampling - and effectively, the interpolation method provides the upsampled sequence of information at the new higher sample rate without the need for a filter. I think this means that for the 44.1kHz signal, you do not need to pass through a digital filter first, then upsample, since the interpolation provides this function already.

Sample rate conversion - which can be up or down, i would expect to mean that the final sample frequency is not guaranteed to be an integer multiple or fraction of the initial sample rate. Such as an upsample 44.1kHz to 192kHz, or 176.4kHz downsample to 48kHz.

Oversampling - i would expect to mean that the final sample rate is an integer multiple of the original signal sample rate - such as 44.1kHz oversampled to 176.4kHz. If interpolation is used, then no need for a digital filter applied to the incoming data before upsampling ?

Regards,

Richard.


This is what I thought at first but I got the word from the person who designed the sample rate conversion algorithm I use (easily the most transparent of the dozens I've used - with the sole criterion for transparence being the unconverted original). He tells me there will indeed be a 22.05 kHz filter when converting a 44.1k original to 192k.

Best regards,
Barry
www.soundkeeperrecordings.com
www.barrydiamentaudio.com


Hi Barry,

Hmmm, i have a text by Analog Devices and a DSP book which seem to indicate that no 22.05kHz filter is required - so is it that the data that the person states requires a 22.05kHz is raw 44.1kHz sampled data with no analogue filter at the front end before sampling ?

If you interpolate correctly between the 44.1kHz samples at a higher rate - then this will not introduce aliasing etc. (i think)

Regards,

Richard.


The interpolation algorithm IS the filter - or should be. You can use non-filtering interpolating algorithms like the Legato Link, and the result is then full of images. The usual way of doing the interpolation is using a linear-phase FIR (Finite Impulse Response) filter. This is what is inside virtually all DAC's that take the input data at its native 44.1kHz. There are effectively no DAC's designed for non-upsampled audio which don't use filtering/upsampling somewhere within the process.
Werner Offline
#82 Posted : 16 February 2012 06:41:18(UTC)
Werner


Rank: HIFI Novice

Joined: 28/04/2009(UTC)
Posts: 77
Location: Belgium

Except those pressed into NOS services, of course.

To Shadders: please believe us. Whether called 'up' or 'over', it really is all the same,
and you always need a filter. When going up the filter has to be at half the source
rate, to avoid images being created, and when going down it has to be at half the
target rate to avoid aliases being created.

The reason that replay without oversampling ('NOS') works, despite violating the book,
is that images, in an ideal world, are innocuous, and when above 20kHz inaudible to humans.
Many amplifiers and loudspeakers are 'ideal' enough to make this a useful (minority) proposition
in domestic audio.

Aliases, on the other hand, are not to be tolerated.

Well, almost always ...


The distinction between integer and non-integer ratio sample rate conversion is not necessary:
again, both are mathematically the same stuff, except that implementing the latter is
a bit harder and thus more likely to be screwed up by a designer who is signal-theory-illiterate (and
trust me, there are many of those!).


Shadders Offline
#83 Posted : 16 February 2012 11:46:45(UTC)
Shadders


Rank: HIFI Addict

Joined: 07/04/2010(UTC)
Posts: 170
Location: UK

Hi Werner,

I do believe you in that a filter is needed - although the wiki does state as Ken has - that the Interpolation process is the filter. I never thought that Interpolation is a filter - so i was errant here.

It is just that there did see some confusion on what is meant by which statement - upsample or sample rate conversion, and oversampling. Most of the current sigma-delta DACs have oversampling stated as their process - which for the majority of the DAC's the system clock rate is an integer multiple of the incoming data sample rate.

Agreed - sample rate conversion can be any ratio between input and output.

Regards,

Richard.
Werner Offline
#84 Posted : 16 February 2012 12:51:19(UTC)
Werner


Rank: HIFI Novice

Joined: 28/04/2009(UTC)
Posts: 77
Location: Belgium

Shadders wrote:
I never thought that Interpolation is a filter


It all depends on the point of view. Thinking as a mathemagician, or in the time domain, one may name it
'interpolation', whereas speaking as an signal theory expert, or in the frequency domain, one may name it
'filtering'.

After all, in any linear system any act of interpolation has a direct filtering action, and vice
versa, any act of low-pass filtering has an interpolating action. This is just one of the
many faces of the time-frequency duality in Nature.


Shadders wrote:
see some confusion on what is meant by which statement - upsample or sample rate conversion, and oversampling.


Any distinction between oversampling and upsampling, in our context here (it differs in other contexts!), is entirely
artificial and was probably created by marketing forces.

In the 80s the CD player DACs that followed Philips' solution were called 'oversampling', because that term
really neatly described the process of running the DAC section at N x the 44.1kHz source rate while
using digital filtering for the signal reconstruction (ah 'reconstruction', another synonym to 'interpolation'
or 'low-pass filtering' here!).

(IRONICALLY the very oldest internal technical documentation of Philips describing
their dino-era combination of 14 bit DAC and filter named it ... 'upsampling'. Really.)

A while later hardware-based sample rate convertors appeared on the market, obviously intended
as translators between the most used standard rates in studios at the time: 44.1kHz and 48kHz.
These had to tackle non-integer ratio conversion on the fly, and as they were going up or
down, concomittant anti-alias or anti-imaging filtering. As this is pretty hairy to do (but not in
concept), quality was probable rather low.
A bit further down the line DVD appeared, along with rumours of DVD-A, and suddenly
production houses had a need for translation between any combination of 44.1, 48,
88.2, 96, 176.4, 192. So SRCs appeared that went up to 192kHz.

These then were adopted by the audiophool market, smacked in front
of a regular DAC (which until then happily oversampled CD to 176.4kHz or
352.8kHz) and configured for 192kHz output. Magic numbers appeared on
fascias and some bright spark called it 'upsampling' to distinguish it from
'oversampling'. A whole subculture emerged, bent on planting into
the global consciousness that 'up' and 'over' where totally different things,
and that the newest 'up' was sooo much betterish than the olde and crude
'over'.

Technically this was a major step back, of course, but another extremely sad
result was the massive pollution of related 'information' on the internet
and in audio publications, where ignorance of basic signal theory has been elevated to a religion.



Sad, as on a fundamental level all of this really quite simple.





Shadders Offline
#85 Posted : 16 February 2012 13:49:59(UTC)
Shadders


Rank: HIFI Addict

Joined: 07/04/2010(UTC)
Posts: 170
Location: UK

Hi Werner,

I think there is a possible legacy issue here - where oversampling was first introduced - i recall that my Marantz CD63B had 4 times oversampling - which implies integer upsampling.

At the time - no sample rate converters were available - so i believe that oversampling as a marketing term has remained.

Regards,

Richard.
bdiament Offline
#86 Posted : 16 February 2012 15:23:46(UTC)
bdiament


Rank: HIFI Addict

Joined: 09/03/2009(UTC)
Posts: 196
Location: New York

Hi Richard,

Shadders wrote:
...so is it that the data that the person states requires a 22.05kHz is raw 44.1kHz sampled data with no analogue filter at the front end before sampling ?...


The source in the example we discussed was an original 44.1k recording. As far as I know, the converters I use (ULN-8 from Metric Halo) do use filters. (I don't know that proper A-D conversion can occur without them.) Or did I misunderstand the question?

Best regards,
Barry
www.soundkeeperrecordings.com
www.barrydiamentaudio.com

Shadders Offline
#87 Posted : 16 February 2012 16:47:54(UTC)
Shadders


Rank: HIFI Addict

Joined: 07/04/2010(UTC)
Posts: 170
Location: UK

Hi Barry,

It was the 22.05kHz filter that confused me - from the theory i have briefly looked at - the interpolation process is also termed the filter - but i was not aware that this interpolation would be, effectively a filter with 22.05kHz bandwidth. I am still unsure of this aspect, that the interpolation process will band limit the signal to 22.05kHz.

Regards,

Richard.

Edited by user 16 February 2012 17:17:16(UTC)  | Reason: Not specified

Werner Offline
#88 Posted : 16 February 2012 18:09:11(UTC)
Werner


Rank: HIFI Novice

Joined: 28/04/2009(UTC)
Posts: 77
Location: Belgium

Shadders wrote:
I am still unsure of this aspect, that the interpolation process will band limit the signal to 22.05kHz.


The crux of the sampling theorem is that subjecting the discrete samples to a specific kind of filter draws a line through
the samples (interpolates) in such a way that the original pre-sampled signal is recovered. This is the reconstruction process,
and it applies whenever the sample rate is increased (of which the conversion to the continuous time 'analogue'
domain is just one limit case).

Martin Colloms Offline
#89 Posted : 08 March 2012 18:59:43(UTC)
Martin Colloms


Rank: Administrator

Joined: 15/07/2008(UTC)
Posts: 1,847

Was thanked: 8 time(s) in 8 post(s)


review by review, product by product

whether by design or user option choice

the most immediate sound , the most listener involvement seems to come with the least processing involved

no matter how clever the designers claim it to be

there is a processor upgrade war on with designers fooling themselves that cleverer must be better

raw bits and sample rate , yes no argument

but up sampling re-sampling , super filtering rate conversion , etc

so far I am not convinced

but a good product is a good product and some are good despite what the designers have done

Martin Colloms

Werner Offline
#90 Posted : 09 March 2012 07:09:01(UTC)
Werner


Rank: HIFI Novice

Joined: 28/04/2009(UTC)
Posts: 77
Location: Belgium

Yes.

But that does not contradict the other.

Surely you can explain, or at least hypothesise why?

In the grand scheme of things,

not digital audio in particular.


Edited by user 09 March 2012 07:47:20(UTC)  | Reason: Not specified

hifistan Offline
#91 Posted : 09 March 2012 15:23:20(UTC)
hifistan


Rank: Administrator

Joined: 18/11/2008(UTC)
Posts: 759
Location: Indiana, USA

Was thanked: 5 time(s) in 3 post(s)
"I feign no hypothesis": Newton. Sometimes a description will do; took a couple of centuries to come up with an explanation of how gravity worked after he described its effect.
hifistan Offline
#92 Posted : 22 March 2012 18:39:31(UTC)
hifistan


Rank: Administrator

Joined: 18/11/2008(UTC)
Posts: 759
Location: Indiana, USA

Was thanked: 5 time(s) in 3 post(s)
I was talking to my friend Rich yesterday and he had a chance to make a comparison few of us have a chance to. Another friend is a mastering engineer with very good equipment and trained ears. He brought over 4 different versions of the same performance; 1. the high resolution original master 2. his remastering of it, also in high resolution, 3. the commercial CD. 4. the commercial LP. These were played back on his system, which consists of Quad 57s he got from me in the 70s [ rebuilt at least twice] , a Heathkit tube amp completely rebuilt, custom tube/hybrid line stage and an LP12 with Sumiko arm with good MC cartridge. CD was his Marantz 8000 series player driving a professional DAC brought over by the recording engineer. I have forgotten the name; it was one I was not familiar with. All I remember was that it lists for $2500 here and that both the engineer and my friend thought it was the best they had heard. I will find out the name. To shorten an already too long account all sounded different but the LP was the most unlike the original recording. This bothered Rich as he is a mostly vinyl man despite being into computer audio. It made him wonder if vinyl is doing something to make recordings more listenable at the expense of accuracy [ Ken will like that]. I wasn't there[ they are 800 miles away] so I didn't hear it but it does not really surprise me that a digital recording would sound more like a digital master than an analog recording made from that master. My favorite LPs are either direct cut or made from analog masters. Digital can sound very good and the Metrum has made some of my CDs sound a lot better; I just wish recordings in general were made to a higher standard. When you hear Soundkeeper or Yarlung CDs compared to the general run you can see what we are missing.
Togil Online
#93 Posted : 23 March 2012 07:58:27(UTC)
Togil


Rank: HIFI Veteran

Joined: 04/10/2008(UTC)
Posts: 537
Location: Oxford


With careful analysis it should be possible to find out what makes vinyl sound "better" and then recreate the effect with DSP, just as you can get software for emulating tape compression.
Hans
tls Offline
#94 Posted : 24 March 2012 06:29:50(UTC)
tls


Rank: HIFI Novice

Joined: 18/07/2009(UTC)
Posts: 34
Location: montreal

Originally Posted by: Togil Go to Quoted Post

With careful analysis it should be possible to find out what makes vinyl sound "better" and then recreate the effect with DSP, just as you can get software for emulating tape compression.


Why go through all that trouble. Just use a analogue master.

bdiament Offline
#95 Posted : 28 March 2012 17:19:28(UTC)
bdiament


Rank: HIFI Addict

Joined: 09/03/2009(UTC)
Posts: 196
Location: New York

Originally Posted by: hifistan Go to Quoted Post
I was talking to my friend Rich yesterday and he had a chance to make a comparison few of us have a chance to. Another friend is a mastering engineer with very good equipment and trained ears. He brought over 4 different versions of the same performance; 1. the high resolution original master 2. his remastering of it, also in high resolution, 3. the commercial CD. 4. the commercial LP. These were played back on his system, which consists of Quad 57s he got from me in the 70s [ rebuilt at least twice] , a Heathkit tube amp completely rebuilt, custom tube/hybrid line stage and an LP12 with Sumiko arm with good MC cartridge. CD was his Marantz 8000 series player driving a professional DAC brought over by the recording engineer. I have forgotten the name; it was one I was not familiar with. All I remember was that it lists for $2500 here and that both the engineer and my friend thought it was the best they had heard. I will find out the name. To shorten an already too long account all sounded different but the LP was the most unlike the original recording. This bothered Rich as he is a mostly vinyl man despite being into computer audio. It made him wonder if vinyl is doing something to make recordings more listenable at the expense of accuracy [ Ken will like that]. I wasn't there[ they are 800 miles away] so I didn't hear it but it does not really surprise me that a digital recording would sound more like a digital master than an analog recording made from that master. My favorite LPs are either direct cut or made from analog masters. Digital can sound very good and the Metrum has made some of my CDs sound a lot better; I just wish recordings in general were made to a higher standard. When you hear Soundkeeper or Yarlung CDs compared to the general run you can see what we are missing.


Hi hifistan,

It should be remembered that the commercial LP was mastered too. The likelihood of it being a flat transfer (as opposed to having equalization, filtering and dynamic compression added during mastering) is not one I would bet on.

In other words, the potential of vinyl cannot be properly evaluated unless it was mastered to sound like the source, analog or digital. This is not generally how it is done.

Best regards,
Barry
www.soundkeeperrecordings.com
www.barrydiamentaudio.com

P.S. Thank you for your kind and much appreciated nod to Soundkeeper.
darkmatter Offline
#96 Posted : 29 March 2012 11:32:31(UTC)
darkmatter


Rank: Administrator

Joined: 19/09/2008(UTC)
Posts: 1,667
United Kingdom
Location: UK

Thanks: 8 times
Was thanked: 5 time(s) in 5 post(s)
Absolutely, this is why it is so difficult to compare CD to Vinyl the chances of having like for like are minimal
kengale Offline
#97 Posted : 29 March 2012 14:37:19(UTC)
kengale


Rank: HIFI Veteran

Joined: 25/11/2008(UTC)
Posts: 982
Location: UK

Was thanked: 2 time(s) in 2 post(s)
Originally Posted by: bdiament Go to Quoted Post
Originally Posted by: hifistan Go to Quoted Post
I was talking to my friend Rich yesterday and he had a chance to make a comparison few of us have a chance to. Another friend is a mastering engineer with very good equipment and trained ears. He brought over 4 different versions of the same performance; 1. the high resolution original master 2. his remastering of it, also in high resolution, 3. the commercial CD. 4. the commercial LP. These were played back on his system, which consists of Quad 57s he got from me in the 70s [ rebuilt at least twice] , a Heathkit tube amp completely rebuilt, custom tube/hybrid line stage and an LP12 with Sumiko arm with good MC cartridge. CD was his Marantz 8000 series player driving a professional DAC brought over by the recording engineer. I have forgotten the name; it was one I was not familiar with. All I remember was that it lists for $2500 here and that both the engineer and my friend thought it was the best they had heard. I will find out the name. To shorten an already too long account all sounded different but the LP was the most unlike the original recording. This bothered Rich as he is a mostly vinyl man despite being into computer audio. It made him wonder if vinyl is doing something to make recordings more listenable at the expense of accuracy [ Ken will like that]. I wasn't there[ they are 800 miles away] so I didn't hear it but it does not really surprise me that a digital recording would sound more like a digital master than an analog recording made from that master. My favorite LPs are either direct cut or made from analog masters. Digital can sound very good and the Metrum has made some of my CDs sound a lot better; I just wish recordings in general were made to a higher standard. When you hear Soundkeeper or Yarlung CDs compared to the general run you can see what we are missing.


Hi hifistan,

It should be remembered that the commercial LP was mastered too. The likelihood of it being a flat transfer (as opposed to having equalization, filtering and dynamic compression added during mastering) is not one I would bet on.

In other words, the potential of vinyl cannot be properly evaluated unless it was mastered to sound like the source, analog or digital. This is not generally how it is done.

Best regards,
Barry
www.soundkeeperrecordings.com
www.barrydiamentaudio.com

P.S. Thank you for your kind and much appreciated nod to Soundkeeper.


Yep, one of the key employees of any Vinyl recording outfit was the Cutting Engineer, whose job was to match the dynamics of the original to the dynamic range of the cutting process, without it being too obvious to the final lister that it had been done. One thing the direct cutting process couldn't do was the dynamic groove-spacing, so that extreme bass notes didn't cause adjacent grooves to overlap - you need a master tape so that you know one revolution in advance when bass notes are going to arrive. Good cutting engineers were highly regarded for their ability to manipulate the recording in such a way that it wasn't obvious to the end listener.

bdiament Offline
#98 Posted : 29 March 2012 21:15:09(UTC)
bdiament


Rank: HIFI Addict

Joined: 09/03/2009(UTC)
Posts: 196
Location: New York

Hi kengale,

Originally Posted by: kengale Go to Quoted Post
...Good cutting engineers were highly regarded for their ability to manipulate the recording in such a way that it wasn't obvious to the end listener.


While the preview function certainly makes life easier, the best cutting engineers would anticipate dynamic changes in the program and manually adjust the groove pitch to accommodate peaks, without manipulating (i.e. squeezing) the sonics.

George Piros was a master of this. I spent many an hour in his cutting room with him and very much enjoyed watching him ply his craft. And many an hour enjoying the Life he preserved in the records he cut.

Best regards,
Barry
www.soundkeeperrecordings.com
www.barrydiamentaudio.com
Martin Colloms Offline
#99 Posted : 31 March 2012 13:53:29(UTC)
Martin Colloms


Rank: Administrator

Joined: 15/07/2008(UTC)
Posts: 1,847

Was thanked: 8 time(s) in 8 post(s)
Maybe someone will remind me

disc cutting preview required a digital delay line to the music feed to the cutter head?

ie contemporary a/d, d/a conversion for this otherwise analogue path ?

So much could get in the way of a potentially transparent recording

Martin Colloms
Werner Offline
#100 Posted : 02 April 2012 06:05:13(UTC)
Werner


Rank: HIFI Novice

Joined: 28/04/2009(UTC)
Posts: 77
Location: Belgium

Originally Posted by: Martin Colloms Go to Quoted Post
disc cutting preview required a digital delay line to the music feed to the cutter head


Yes.

Either a second head stack with a small tape bin between it
and the first stack> The arrangement required twice the
maintenance and alignment effort, and two racks of processing
gear between the tape machine and the cutting electronics.



But once digital delay lines became available you can
imagine how quickly these became popular with beancounters
and studio techs alike ...




Users browsing this topic
Guest
6 Pages«<3456>
Forum Jump  
You cannot post new topics in this forum.
You cannot reply to topics in this forum.
You cannot delete your posts in this forum.
You cannot edit your posts in this forum.
You cannot create polls in this forum.
You cannot vote in polls in this forum.