Archived from groups: rec.audio.high-end (
More info?)
In article <x%gEc.173343$3x.86251@attbi_s54>,
"Chelvam" <chelvam@myjaring.net> wrote:
> "Timothy A. Seufert" <tas@mindspring.com> wrote in message
> news:cbq7b701kqb@news3.newsguy.com...
> > In article <cbflka0vjn@news2.newsguy.com>,
> > "Chelvam" <chelvam@myjaring.net> wrote:
> >
> snip...snip..
>
> > > The resulting jitter affects the sound quality, as it blurs the sound
> > > representation and increases the high-frequency noise.
> >
> > So let me get this straight: you are arguing that errors in pit lengths
> > resulting in jitter in the signal read from the disc has audible
> > effects, even when there are no changes in data values?
>
> Not me but OEM http
/www.daisy-laser.com, they are pretty reputable in
> audio industry, aren't they?
I wouldn't know, but claims like that are pretty suspect.
> > If that is truly your position, you don't understand how CD playback
> > systems work.
>
> Never claimed I do. I hear and decide. I hear copies of CD-R sound bit
> different from the original. I know digital is digital and supposedly it
> should EXACT copy. Experience tell me otherwise.
You haven't done, or at least haven't mentioned doing, the things you
need to do in order to turn your experience into something more reliable
than anecdote. For example, just for starters, did you verify that the
copies actually were bit perfect? (And did you do so using the machine
used to validate the differences? -- Because some readers will succeed
at reading a marginal quality disc with no errors where others fail.)
> Not only me, there are many
> people in recording industry believes so.
There are people in the recording industry who believe all sorts of
silly things, such as the idea that compressing the hell out of
recordings and letting them clip is good practice.
Part of the problem is that recording engineers often aren't.
Engineers, that is. So far as I can tell, you can succeed at being a
recording engineer without having anything beyond a very shallow
understanding of electrical (or any other form of) engineering.
> I hope daisy-laser people can reply this. As far as I am concern, I heard
> difference in CD-R and original. When I recorded at different speed, i heard
> difference. No pops or skips, just different. And I am sharing that with
> others.
See above. And did you hear difference in a DBT, or just an informal
test?
Everything I have ever read on the topic says that as you do more and
more tightly controlled experiments (in other words as you make more and
more sure that there cannot be any changing factors other than the one
you want to test), differences like these will disappear.
--
Tim