@blang11
We have a couple of other threads re:MQA going on, but yes, it’s true, but ONLY if you are EQ’ing in the digital domain. Using something like a miniDSP or DiracLive which does AD -> EQ -> DA is not affected! Except that if you do that, you are going to do away with the fairy dust MQA sprinkled. More below.
The reason this happens is that the extra octaves are being hidden in the lowest bits of the signal. So, change any of those bits and you ruin the ability to decode the signal. Just like if you took a ZIP file and started messing with the lowest 2 bits of every byte.
Even if you include your DSP in more advanced DAC’s (of which I know of like 2) It’s not at all clear that the alleged benefits of MQA’s digital decoding filters would live through it. Like doing this in your player: MQA-> PCM -> EQ -> MQA ouptut filters -> D/A converter
Then you take the reason the filters allegedly work. They claim less time smearing than conventional digital filters. Well, if you stick a miniDSP (or equivalent) your going to be putting your sound through another A/D, D/A signal without any of the fairy dust present.
To my mind this whole house of mirrors starts to unravel when you start asking what happens with multi-track sources, and when the MQA encoding filters gets applied.
By the way, I went to 2L.com and listened to a few MQA encoded tracks. I could not tell a difference between the 96/24 and the MQA which claimed to be doing 384k/24.
From a practical perspective, this whole thing is looking more and more like Enron or "Dark Energy Generators." I’ve yet to either hear a difference, and I have asked, repeatedly, to be given access to a pair of demo tracks which would demonstrate this alleged superiority.
In addition, what I did not know, is that the whole encode/decode system is lossy. Based on the origami charts I had assumed it was lossless. Not so,
Best,
Erik
We have a couple of other threads re:MQA going on, but yes, it’s true, but ONLY if you are EQ’ing in the digital domain. Using something like a miniDSP or DiracLive which does AD -> EQ -> DA is not affected! Except that if you do that, you are going to do away with the fairy dust MQA sprinkled. More below.
The reason this happens is that the extra octaves are being hidden in the lowest bits of the signal. So, change any of those bits and you ruin the ability to decode the signal. Just like if you took a ZIP file and started messing with the lowest 2 bits of every byte.
Even if you include your DSP in more advanced DAC’s (of which I know of like 2) It’s not at all clear that the alleged benefits of MQA’s digital decoding filters would live through it. Like doing this in your player: MQA-> PCM -> EQ -> MQA ouptut filters -> D/A converter
Then you take the reason the filters allegedly work. They claim less time smearing than conventional digital filters. Well, if you stick a miniDSP (or equivalent) your going to be putting your sound through another A/D, D/A signal without any of the fairy dust present.
To my mind this whole house of mirrors starts to unravel when you start asking what happens with multi-track sources, and when the MQA encoding filters gets applied.
By the way, I went to 2L.com and listened to a few MQA encoded tracks. I could not tell a difference between the 96/24 and the MQA which claimed to be doing 384k/24.
From a practical perspective, this whole thing is looking more and more like Enron or "Dark Energy Generators." I’ve yet to either hear a difference, and I have asked, repeatedly, to be given access to a pair of demo tracks which would demonstrate this alleged superiority.
In addition, what I did not know, is that the whole encode/decode system is lossy. Based on the origami charts I had assumed it was lossless. Not so,
Best,
Erik