I've always been a critic of it, since 44.1khz can accurately reproduce all the way up to 22khz (especially with modern oversampling DACs), and no music has a dynamic range greater than the 96dB offered by 16bit audio. Out of sheer curiosity, I decided to purchase coldplay's a rush of blood to the head, Nirvana's never mind, and Mussorgsky's pictures at an exhibition, as performed by the mariinsky orchestra, all files were either 24/96 or 24/192. To make abxing simpler, I used my DAW to resample all files to 24/44.1 using a 512pt sinc, which is extreme overkill, and a much higher precision than used for down sampling final CD masters, then resampled them back to 24/96 with the same precision.
I loaded the files up for abxing in foobar, I picked "clocks" from the coldplay album, "the hut on fowl's legs", from pictures at an orchestra, and " in bloom" from never mind. I used foobar's wasapi output plugin, to ensure the audio to the receiver wasn't tainted by windows audio engine in any way.
With clocks, in a 16 trial test, I managed to get 13/16, the parts that gave it away were the cymbal's and snare, in bloom, 11/16, again, the percussion was the major difference, the hut on fowl's legs, 8/16. A second trial with the hut on fowls legs was performed, because at that point I figured the poor results were due to my ears being tired from back to back testing. The second test, I managed 14/16. The attack of the cymbals and drum again, gave it away. This is the same difference I noticed with Tidal's mqa streaming.
Curious as to what exactly might be the cause of the difference, I did a bit of researching. Apparently, 44.1khz is unable to properly capture or reproduce transients and impulses without audible temporal smearing, due to the fact that our ears are able to resolve a timing difference of as little as 6 ms. Yamaha wrote an article on the limitations of digital sampling, stating that in order to properly capture transients and impulses in the audible range, a minimum of 166khz was required (assuming a 6ms response). I managed to dig up a bunch more info, but I want to first hear from other's whether or not you've had a chance to abx test hi res, and if so, what were the results? I was very surprised, as I went into this thinking I'd probably get a 50% or less result, basically due to guessing.
Sent from my 5065N using Tapatalk