Hi @Gregm,
I meant that in theory, humans should not be able to hear better than 44/16.
I meant that in theory, humans should not be able to hear better than 44/16.
How many of you believe in MQA?
@Brianlucey @bkepke and @iopscprl I agree with you three the most of this forum's posters. I've heard MQA at audio shows and cannot remember the equipment. Overall, I wasn't impressed. The rooms had a spacious, wide sound but nothing wanted me to opt for that sound. When the differences are marginally better, I'll stick to the easier to use technologies such as the CD (ha ha my LPs and 78s are not easier to use but I have 32,000 of them). I have a SOTA listening room which is a good place to begin serious listening. I thought the ayon/lumenwhite room using my LPs and CDs sounded great, second best sound at the LA audio show for two years running in 2016 and 2017. |
Brian, your post is music to my eyes :-) What MQA promotes as "restoring" the impulse response, is not much more than forcing a minimum phase filter on the DAC, which creates a potentially "nice" looking step response .... at least nice to those that are unaware of what a step-response should look like in digital system. To your point, the distortions that creates may float some boats, which is totally okay, but a DAC with a switchable filter response also can do that, no licensing fee required. I thought the "master authenticated" would have brought more quality recordings to the forefront, but personally have not noticed any significant difference. brianlucey67 posts09-20-2019 12:09pm... . If it “sounds better” to you that’s fine. But that’s because the subtle harmonic distortions of the codec float your subjective boat. A cable or speaker alter sound subjectively and so does MQA. To me however, it’s ruining my work, the client approved work. It’s a travesty built on greed and lies. ... ...Most audiophiles have playback rooms rooms that are by far the weakest link in their chain. By far. |