I'm new to DC6 (it hasn't even arrived yet) but not to digital signal processing as an art. I'm an amateur astronomer who has been using Astroart to process my digital images for about a decade now. I've also used Photoshop, GIMP and Paint Shop Pro extensively for image processing.
I've been playing with the demo for a while now and I have a couple of questions for the crowd here.
I've been testing my system by recording silence with various pieces of equipment hooked up and then playing back the recording into the Spectrum Analyzer. This is a common technique in astronomical image processing and it seemed perfectly logical to do the same thing in audio.
At the moment I have a Turtle Beach Santa Cruz sound card installed in my rather aged and lethargic 1.8 gHz Celeron box, although I have an Audiophile 2496 card set aside for the new dual 2.66 gHz Pentium D box I'm trying to debug right now (it looks like the motherboard is borked).
By watching the VU meters during playback, it would seem that my noise level is about 72 to 74 dB below clipping when nothing is plugged into the sound card. Is this a reasonable figure, or do I have a defective sound card?
There is a noticeable rise in the noise level below about six hundred Hz or so, is this normal?
It was quite illuminating to find out that my preamp (a Yamaha RX 500U receiver) is about 6 dB noisier without anything plugged into the phono input than when the turntable/cartridge combination is plugged in.
My overall noise level with everything plugged up is about 68 dB or so below clipping. Is this an adequate figure?
By generating waves and then running them through various filters I have noted that the brick wall filter seems to be less effective than the paragraphic equalizer set with a severe turn down at the selected frequency. Not to mention that you can keep the pass band flat with the paragraphic equalizer and there is a distinct hump in the passband of the brick wall filter right above the turnover frequency when the filter is set aggressively. My turntable has a decently low rumble figure but it would seem that a lot of the records I'm ripping have considerable low frequency noise that I'm trying to block out and apparently the paragraphic equalizer is a better tool for that than the brick wall filter.
Is this observation correct or is there something blatantly obvious that I'm missing?
Oh, and one more thing, the paragraphic equalizer runs a lot faster than the brick wall filter when it is set aggressively.
That's about it for now, I'm sure that when my CTP, test record and DC6 arrive I'll have many more questions.
Cheers,
Jon
I've been playing with the demo for a while now and I have a couple of questions for the crowd here.
I've been testing my system by recording silence with various pieces of equipment hooked up and then playing back the recording into the Spectrum Analyzer. This is a common technique in astronomical image processing and it seemed perfectly logical to do the same thing in audio.
At the moment I have a Turtle Beach Santa Cruz sound card installed in my rather aged and lethargic 1.8 gHz Celeron box, although I have an Audiophile 2496 card set aside for the new dual 2.66 gHz Pentium D box I'm trying to debug right now (it looks like the motherboard is borked).
By watching the VU meters during playback, it would seem that my noise level is about 72 to 74 dB below clipping when nothing is plugged into the sound card. Is this a reasonable figure, or do I have a defective sound card?
There is a noticeable rise in the noise level below about six hundred Hz or so, is this normal?
It was quite illuminating to find out that my preamp (a Yamaha RX 500U receiver) is about 6 dB noisier without anything plugged into the phono input than when the turntable/cartridge combination is plugged in.
My overall noise level with everything plugged up is about 68 dB or so below clipping. Is this an adequate figure?
By generating waves and then running them through various filters I have noted that the brick wall filter seems to be less effective than the paragraphic equalizer set with a severe turn down at the selected frequency. Not to mention that you can keep the pass band flat with the paragraphic equalizer and there is a distinct hump in the passband of the brick wall filter right above the turnover frequency when the filter is set aggressively. My turntable has a decently low rumble figure but it would seem that a lot of the records I'm ripping have considerable low frequency noise that I'm trying to block out and apparently the paragraphic equalizer is a better tool for that than the brick wall filter.
Is this observation correct or is there something blatantly obvious that I'm missing?
Oh, and one more thing, the paragraphic equalizer runs a lot faster than the brick wall filter when it is set aggressively.
That's about it for now, I'm sure that when my CTP, test record and DC6 arrive I'll have many more questions.
Cheers,
Jon
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