".....Well even the best S/W DSP volume controls seem to cause audible artifacts at more than about -9dB of volume reduction. No amount of dithering and resampling will help IMO....
There is absoltely no consensus on this, nor confirmation in listening tests. Lots of digital guru's will tell you -25db is fine. My personal experience confirms this."
I have a background implementing dithering and resampling algorithms for image processing applications used by the government and military. Not sure about this statement either. I would expect different yet comparable results in terms of accuracy to the alternative of not using digital if done well. Of course, that's always the big if with anything.
Also, the algorithms needed to accomplish optimal results have been well documented in academia for decades already and are old hat in the image processing world. I have no idea why it need cost a fortune to implement decent software based dithering and resampling to lower volume in home audio gear these days. That's why I like to buy gear that likes to advertise how their gear achieves performance, not just the claimed results. Then one can really know the value of what they buy if they care enough to do the homework.
In the case of DCS, specifically the newer more mega buck than ever Debussy gear, theirs is seemingly some of the most sophisticated home digital audio processing gear and software out there from what I read (with sound quality to match bsed on actual audition) but it comes for a hefty price. I would expect a very good perhaps reference implementation there that noone could fault based on technical approach nor listening.
There is absoltely no consensus on this, nor confirmation in listening tests. Lots of digital guru's will tell you -25db is fine. My personal experience confirms this."
I have a background implementing dithering and resampling algorithms for image processing applications used by the government and military. Not sure about this statement either. I would expect different yet comparable results in terms of accuracy to the alternative of not using digital if done well. Of course, that's always the big if with anything.
Also, the algorithms needed to accomplish optimal results have been well documented in academia for decades already and are old hat in the image processing world. I have no idea why it need cost a fortune to implement decent software based dithering and resampling to lower volume in home audio gear these days. That's why I like to buy gear that likes to advertise how their gear achieves performance, not just the claimed results. Then one can really know the value of what they buy if they care enough to do the homework.
In the case of DCS, specifically the newer more mega buck than ever Debussy gear, theirs is seemingly some of the most sophisticated home digital audio processing gear and software out there from what I read (with sound quality to match bsed on actual audition) but it comes for a hefty price. I would expect a very good perhaps reference implementation there that noone could fault based on technical approach nor listening.