C
Christine Tham
Guest
Response to comments
Hi - i am the author of the article(s) and Gene has asked me to respond to some comments made in this forum.
here are what i gathered were the main points:
if you are not convinced, think of it this way: suppose i said i didn't use a soundcard, i used the super duper XYZ Spectral Analyser and Dynamic Comparator. would that have made the measurements more valid? well, it may surprise you, but most high end test measuring equipment these days, particularly those that analyse the measurements digitally, use PCM ADCs to sample the signals. the only difference is the quality of the PCM ADCs. and in fact, the soundcard probably has a higher resolution/accuracy than many of the older devices out there. i know - i used to work for HP many years ago (before thet spinned off agilent and bought compaq) - all the high end test and measurement devices were digital and used PCM ADCs.
Hi - i am the author of the article(s) and Gene has asked me to respond to some comments made in this forum.
here are what i gathered were the main points:
response: absolutely correct, LPs have many limitations and cutting LPs without causing mistracking is an art rather than a science. agree that article should perhaps have highlighted these. however, to my knowledge, most material should be okay, examples like telarc's cannon shots are fairly rare. i must point out that some of these "limitations" are removed using half speed mastering and a good turntable.av_phile: inherent limitations in cutting LPs?
response: actually, the CD player, Sony SCD-XA777ES is a high end deck that retails at over twice the combined price of the mid-end analog rig. however, do agree that turntables are a lot more difficult to setup to sound correctly, with cds it's plug and play.av_phile: "I wonder if the CD player used has the same hi-end attributes as the hi-end turntable used"
response: perhaps article should have made more clear, but the specific titles were chosen because it was likely that the different formats were sourced from the same master, so the comment about these being "different" masters/mixes is incorrect. indeed, i have confirmation via private email from one of the engineers who mastered one of the titles i used that CD and LP were indeed sourced from same master tape. he added that he supports my findings - he's always noted these differences but i was the first one to publish them.WmAx: "question the value of these comparisons of different masters/mixes of titles against 'each other' on different formats"
response: if you think about it, the technology used by the soundcard doesn't matter - it is used purely as a measuring device, all that matters is that the measurements are "accurate". in this respect, the soundcard is actually far more accurate than an average CRO or test bench measuring device. the fact that it captures in PCM is immaterial - most of the limitations of PCM are in the playback, not in the capture. of course, the soundcard will not reveal any benefits of DSD from the higher sampling rate - such as perhaps higher time accuracy, and the resolution is probably too low to do accurate measurement of impulse response. all measurement devices have limitations, including heisenberg's principle. for the purposes of spectral and dynamic comparisons, which are all these articles are about, a PCM soundcard is a very valid measurement device and will highlight differences - as the articles demonstrate.docferdie: "question the validity of using the audiotrak 7.1 as a measuring device to carry out the desired comparisons in this article. CD is PCM and SACD is DSD and yet they are both being evaluated by a card that can only work on PCM."
if you are not convinced, think of it this way: suppose i said i didn't use a soundcard, i used the super duper XYZ Spectral Analyser and Dynamic Comparator. would that have made the measurements more valid? well, it may surprise you, but most high end test measuring equipment these days, particularly those that analyse the measurements digitally, use PCM ADCs to sample the signals. the only difference is the quality of the PCM ADCs. and in fact, the soundcard probably has a higher resolution/accuracy than many of the older devices out there. i know - i used to work for HP many years ago (before thet spinned off agilent and bought compaq) - all the high end test and measurement devices were digital and used PCM ADCs.