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Naturalust
Our ear hears most frequencies between say 20 Hz and 20 kHz. CD's sampled at 44.1Khz CAN NOT reproduce this, our ear hears more so something is lost!
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midnramblerQuote
Naturalust
Our ear hears most frequencies between say 20 Hz and 20 kHz. CD's sampled at 44.1Khz CAN NOT reproduce this, our ear hears more so something is lost!
Wrong. See: [en.wikipedia.org]
If you hear 20 kHz a sampling rate of 40 kHz is enough to reproduce the original signal.
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Edith Grove
How does excess cerumen affect our ability to hear kHz ?
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NaturalustQuote
midnramblerQuote
Naturalust
Our ear hears most frequencies between say 20 Hz and 20 kHz. CD's sampled at 44.1Khz CAN NOT reproduce this, our ear hears more so something is lost!
Wrong. See: [en.wikipedia.org]
If you hear 20 kHz a sampling rate of 40 kHz is enough to reproduce the original signal.
OK rambler, you do the math for us then... use 10 HZ to 22Khz as the human range this time. I was just simplifying for the benefit of the majority of readers here. peace
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midnramblerQuote
NaturalustQuote
midnramblerQuote
Naturalust
Our ear hears most frequencies between say 20 Hz and 20 kHz. CD's sampled at 44.1Khz CAN NOT reproduce this, our ear hears more so something is lost!
Wrong. See: [en.wikipedia.org]
If you hear 20 kHz a sampling rate of 40 kHz is enough to reproduce the original signal.
OK rambler, you do the math for us then... use 10 HZ to 22Khz as the human range this time. I was just simplifying for the benefit of the majority of readers here, should have been more accurate, thx. peace
Old fans like me do not hear more than 10 kHz!
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Edith Grove
Just do like me and buy CDs.