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by SomeoneFromCA
2196 days ago
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What I said actually does make sense. First of all, if you are digitally lowering loudness of audio (say 4 times), you actually are losing precision, and if you later amplify again - you will never return these bits back. This is what is called headroom. So your typical multiply-by-a-floating-point volume control actually kills dynamic range of the sound. I for example never run my OS volume control and players volume knob at 100% (which would preserve the range), because the gain of my amp is simply to high, and even slightest movement of the amp knob will cause dramatic change in loudness. Therefore, I keep the digital volume controls at 25% (losing 2 bits on the way, but the audio is recorded at 16-bit - losing nothing), and then amplify with my amp. Voila - nothing lost in the process.
Secondly, empirically, every time I switch sound cards to 24 bits it sounds better. I have noticeably less fatigue. Of course, someone may want to gaslight me (not deliberately, of course), attempting to force me to think it is a placebo, but I tried with many people, and all of them noted the difference. |
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When people talk about 24 bits (and >48kHz) in the context of "audiophilia", it's generally about the data at rest and "HD audio" (aka 24 bit music files and downloads). Not about the bit depth of the processing pipeline for which it's generally acknowledged that yes, >16 bit depth does make sense for the audio processing pipeline (as well as the original recording).