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I use SONAR to record at 48kHz and 24 bits.

after i mix down i need to export the wav to cool edit to downsmaple to 44.1.

is there a better program for doing this? does wavelab do this?

mike

Comments

falkon2 Wed, 06/04/2003 - 08:34

Not all programs handle resampling the same way. You could be introducing quite a bit of treble noise if the program simply draws straight lines between the samples and calculates the values of each sample in the new sampling rate based on these lines. (1st order filtering)

You'll want a program that does nth-order filtering reliably. I'm pretty sure Cakewalk doesn't introduce much more noise than necessary, but Wavelab is a better bet, in any case.

A good read:
http://www.vlsi.fi/other/VS_SRC/SampleRateTutorial.html

Edit: My mistake. SONAR only allows you to set the sampling rate before starting a project... there isn't any converter in the program itself.

anonymous Wed, 06/04/2003 - 20:52

I've seen a few folks compare wavelab head to head with Cool Edit 2.x. So far, Cool Edit has come out slightly ahead - but both are good.

Ozone from Izotope.com has a great algorithm for dithering from 24-bit down to 16-bit, if that is also something you might need. Its also a killer tool for final multiband processing/compression/limiting/mastering. They have a free PDF about dithering on their site that's worth the read.

-lee-

anonymous Thu, 06/05/2003 - 07:35

Don't get me wrong - Wavelab is a good solid tool. CEP gets high marks for the quality of its conversion, and for the way it lets *you* make lots of tradeoffs between time spent in the conversion and quality of output.

For example with dithering - you have 5 different options as to the method used, and 11 different options in terms of noise shaping.

Bottom line - both are solid programs and will give you good results. I personally feel Sonar combined with CEP, Ozone and UAD-1 provides a killer platform for making quality music.

-lee-

anonymous Fri, 06/06/2003 - 00:36

Originally posted by mikezfx:
I use SONAR to record at 48kHz and 24 bits.

after i mix down i need to export the wav to cool edit to downsmaple to 44.1.

is there a better program for doing this? does wavelab do this?

mike

Why do you record at 48kHz (soundcard limitations?)
If possible you would be better off recording at 44.1/24. Resampling 48 -> 44.1 would probably introduce more artifacts and offset the benefits of using 24 bit.

Erik

Opus2000 Fri, 06/06/2003 - 18:30

Actually if you're going to do higher sampling rates your better off at 88.2 as the mathematical breakdown is half of what it needs to get to when going down to 44.1.

At 96khz you'll get artifacts such as when you go from 48 to 44.1 as Erik pointed out.

Remember the "true" main benefit of higher sampling rates is for when you bounce down to 44.1 in the long run.

Having worked for Apogee for quite some time now and learning all about converter technology and all that fun stuff you realize just how unimportant sample rates are...

Opus :D