@gdhal
Hi Hal,
No, my statement was not intended to imply that musical information is lost when data having more bits per sample and a lower sample rate is converted to fewer bits per sample at a higher sample rate. From a theoretical standpoint nothing will be lost if the increase in sample rate is sufficient to compensate for the decrease in bits per sample.
And while I do not have detailed familiarity with the specifics of modern delta-sigma DAC designs, user reports of good results with high end delta-sigma designs, published measurements, comments by some who have such familiarity (such as the comments provided by Steve and Shadorne yesterday), as well as my general belief (shared by many others here) that in audio how well a chosen design approach is implemented is usually more important than which approach is chosen, all lead me to believe that "throwing away the original samples" (as referred to by Schiit) is a non-issue in modern high end designs.
Best regards,
-- Al
Hi Hal,
No, my statement was not intended to imply that musical information is lost when data having more bits per sample and a lower sample rate is converted to fewer bits per sample at a higher sample rate. From a theoretical standpoint nothing will be lost if the increase in sample rate is sufficient to compensate for the decrease in bits per sample.
And while I do not have detailed familiarity with the specifics of modern delta-sigma DAC designs, user reports of good results with high end delta-sigma designs, published measurements, comments by some who have such familiarity (such as the comments provided by Steve and Shadorne yesterday), as well as my general belief (shared by many others here) that in audio how well a chosen design approach is implemented is usually more important than which approach is chosen, all lead me to believe that "throwing away the original samples" (as referred to by Schiit) is a non-issue in modern high end designs.
Best regards,
-- Al