Hello Michael,
At 10.13 28/07/2003 +0200, you wrote:
...
A 22050 Hz sine could be really accurate (one sample
up, one sample down
every 1/22050th second), and so is 11025. But intermediary frequencies
introduces temporal aliasing, some metallic feeling due to temporal
quantization. This is inherent to the very low sampling rate (96 kHz is just
...
sorry, but this is incorrect. The sampled signal has nothing to do with the
information it carries. The sampled signal just contains the information
needed to get back the original signal but it isn't the original signal
(despite at lower frequency it pretty much resemble the original signal),
you have to pass it through a reconstruction filter to get the original
(bandlimited) signal back. You can't simply look at the sampled signal to
see what the original signal was, much the same way you can't just look at
a compressed file to see what the original file was. This is one of the
most common misconception circulating about PCM, but it is indeed a
misconception.
If you hear a difference between DSD and PCM the problem should be
somewhere else, may be in the ADC/DAC used, may be in the DSD itself, but
sure not in what you describe above.
Bye,
--
Denis Sbragion
InfoTecna
Tel: +39 0362 805396, Fax: +39 0362 805404
URL:
http://www.infotecna.it