Sampling rates
I have a Sonar V-Studio 100 as my interface/control surface which has a sampling rate of 24bit/96kHz.
Planning on adding an A/D D/A converter (RME ADI-2) to my chain. The RME has a sampling rate of 24bit/196 kHz.
I have a Sonar V-Studio 100 as my interface/control surface which has a sampling rate of 24bit/96kHz.
Planning on adding an A/D D/A converter (RME ADI-2) to my chain. The RME has a sampling rate of 24bit/196 kHz.
Some new features and added software for the new Samplitude include Independence Sampling Workstation
Enjoy,
You need to get your head around the concept of aliasing.
I have read enough about oversampling to know that the process is for improving audio quality whereby converters sample at a higher rate than the base frequency, which facilitates the use of filters with a gentler slope (curtesy of recording.org audio terms) And given the vast amount of practical things one needs to learn about recording, that is enough of an understanding of oversampling for m
Used during analog to digital and digital to analog conversion and refers to the process whereby the converters sample at much higher rates than the base frequency. This allows the filters to be much gentler in slope, which results in less phase distortion in the audible spectrum.
so i messed up a clients session for the first time today and I'm trying to fix it for them...
so i used a saved template today for drums and i believe i saved that template at 44.1 originally. and stupidly today wasn't thinking and recorded the session at 48. (I'm not even sure if templates keep the original sampling rate but it makes sense to me)
Has there been a poll taken on which sample rate is most common among the forum users?
I wasn't able to create a poll for the topic...maybe someone more familiar with how to do that would make one
Ok so I recorded a whole session on PT 8 at 48 khz as opposed to 44.1. I have tried creating a new session and importing tracks to no success. When I recorded the clock source was my Digimax FS, so Pro Tools thinks it is a 44.1 session when it's actually a 48 khz session.