On Thursday 22 February 2007, Brett W. McCoy wrote:
On 2/22/07, Sampo Savolainen <v2(a)iki.fi> wrote:
On Thu, 2007-02-22 at 13:48 -0600, millward
wrote:
I've got a sound card capable of 96 bits, (
M-Audio audiofile 24/96 )
but my sound editor, Audacity for Linux, only goes up to 32 bits.
Is there a sound editor for Linux that can do higher than 32 bits?
You have misunderstood the specifications of that soundcard. 24/96
refers to a maximum depth of 24 bits (=32 bit float) and up to 96000Hz
sampling rate. This is /way/ enough for use with audible audio.
I have a further question on that... if I am using Jack (w/ Ardour),
does Jack automatically use the highest bit resolution possible for my
hardware (in my case, a Delta1010), and this is only overridden with
the 'force 16 bits' flag? (Overlooking any session exporting to a
file, of course).
Yes (i use a delta 66 for jack):
loading driver ..
apparent rate = 48000
creating alsa driver ... hw:1|hw:1|1024|2|48000|0|0|nomon|swmeter|-|32bit
control device hw:1
configuring for 48000Hz, period = 1024 frames, buffer = 2 periods
ALSA: final selected sample format for capture: 32bit little-endian
ALSA: use 2 periods for capture
ALSA: final selected sample format for playback: 32bit little-endian
ALSA: use 2 periods for playback
It also tells you when it fails selecting a bit depth. I don't use 96khz yet
[too demanding disc space requirements]..
Flo
--
Palimm Palimm!