![]() If you play a ripped 16/44 file and a "remastered" 24/192 file, both from the same original analogue "master", and can't hear a difference it's because you equipment won't play that difference. "Up scaling" the poor sounding ones to 24/192 won't make then sound any better!Īs for your headphones, and the rest of your audio system, you will only hear differences if your equipment will play those differences. There are great sounding 16/44 CDs and there are poor sounding 16/44 CDs. And at any bit rate the sound quality depends much more on the original, analogue, recording's fidelity and post production engineering than on the bit rate used for the final product. won't sound any better that the original CD. Nothing in the "recording chain" (live performance to your ears) can make the original sound better, though everything in the path has the possibility of making it sound less worse!.Ī 16 bit 44 kHz CD ripped at 24 bits 192 kHz. ![]() ![]() Irregardless of the format and bit depth, a sound file can only sound as good as the original analogue recording.
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