@blang11
Another thing that is not clear is how MQA encoding plays with regular studio work.
The way it should to work is that the MQA encoding process should take your A/D converers into account and compensate for it’s shortcomings. Well, what does that mean if you are mixing several tracks, or doing level changes, EQ, compression, or expansion? Does MQA somehow magically know how to compensate for these algorithms? Mind you, this is all work done before we even encode the signal.
It is possible some of this could be overcome, like with DSD. What’s not clear to me is that there’s any benefit at all to MQA encoding. I remain unimpressed.
Best,
Erik
Another thing that is not clear is how MQA encoding plays with regular studio work.
The way it should to work is that the MQA encoding process should take your A/D converers into account and compensate for it’s shortcomings. Well, what does that mean if you are mixing several tracks, or doing level changes, EQ, compression, or expansion? Does MQA somehow magically know how to compensate for these algorithms? Mind you, this is all work done before we even encode the signal.
It is possible some of this could be overcome, like with DSD. What’s not clear to me is that there’s any benefit at all to MQA encoding. I remain unimpressed.
Best,
Erik