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Wav Or 320
So i have been told by just about everyone that wav's are better, but I honestly cannot hear the difference. Even DJ's ive seen at clubs will spin either and I still hear no difference. Am I a retard or is it just the file size that is different?
You're simply just not going to hear a difference on a big club system. Most will still not be able to tell a difference even in a familiar listening environment on familiar equipment, and I'd even go as far to say as it is probably psychosomatic in those who say otherwise.
hahaha...yea i thought I was insane, because my friend somehow wont back down and say they are just about the same quality. Do you actually know what differences there are?
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| Originally posted by badapple@trance hahaha...yea i thought I was insane, because my friend somehow wont back down and say they are just about the same quality. Do you actually know what differences there are? |
There was actually a thread on this not weeks ago (and many before that).
The jpeg comparison is good for a visual aid, but I generally find that with mp3s, the bass is lacking depth and the hi's get too crunchy. 320 is at least decent but I personally wouldn't play in a club with mp3s. If you are using CD decks, you want to burn them as wav anyway so why not buy them as wav in first place. I get it if you are a serato/FS etc user, but storage is getting so cheap now, I would just with wav. (I just picked up a Seagate 500gb external drive for $80).
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| Originally posted by DJ RANN is at least decent but I personally wouldn't play in a club with mp3s. |
The wav files are better quality but you won't really hear it that much. I play on large club systems every week and used to only download wav files for the quality. I now have a mix of 320 and wav. When I play the wav there is a differene in volume for sure, but as long as you're aware of it thats fine.
I have tested the same track in an empty club in wav and 320. The wav does sound better but its a small difference and know one else would really know...
320 is like 1/5 of the quality of wav. wavs have like 1,4? mb/s? and 320 has like 320kb/s. 128kbps is 1/12 of wav!! stay away.
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| Originally posted by palm 320 is like 1/5 of the quality of wav. wavs have like 1,4? mb/s? and 320 has like 320kb/s. 128kbps is 1/12 of wav!! stay away. |
like out of 5 dj's ive seen perform, they told me it varies but mostly they use 320's. I really cannot tell the difference at all
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| Originally posted by badapple@trance like out of 5 dj's ive seen perform, they told me it varies but mostly they use 320's. I really cannot tell the difference at all |
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| Originally posted by david.michael There's a lot more to it than that. You can't say 320 is 1/5 the quality of wav based on that. |
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| Originally posted by palm at the same samplerate i dont think its more to it realy. |
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| Originally posted by david.michael Because mp3 is algorithm-based compression. It doesn't just subtract any old random data, or start linearly from the top or bottom of the frequency spectrum. |
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| Originally posted by palm arent u talking about VBR now? |
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| Originally posted by david.michael This is quite common and, I'd say, likely the industry standard (for digital playback). I mean, it's not like you're going to be dancing in the club, and all of a sudden one of your buddies stops you and goes "wait, wa-wa-wa-wait... stop. Do you hear that? Is that-- is that... a fucking 320kbps mp3 I hear playing?!" |
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| Originally posted by david.michael Nah, I'm just pointing out that the mp3 encoder (LAME, etc.) starts stripping away the least important data first... stuff you don't even hear, and works its way down. |
Well despite the fact its harder to detect the difference, the differences are still there, and you'll simply enjoy a higher bitrate song more.
I'd also like to point out (in theory anyway) that a 1440kbps mp3 would sound better then a 1440kbps wav. You would have to rip from an even better quality source though, like vinyl or whatever.
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| Originally posted by palm yeah in wav files with alot of air this is possible, but with fully mastered dance-tracks, with brick-wall-dynamics, i cant realy understand its possible not to loose the same amount as the "compression" does, either in dynamics or in frequency. for example if u have a track peaking at 0dB in wav it will distort when converting to wav, already then u understand it must clip and boost the freqs together somehow. i dont know tho it just dont seems logical that theres info left to "cut out" in todays music. |
I'm so sick of people who have no idea about MP3 slagging it. I'd love to see all these people who complain about losing dynamics and bass take an AB test on club systems.
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| Originally posted by palm at the same samplerate i dont think its more to it realy. |
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| Originally posted by kitphillips Fuckin what I'm so sick of people who have no idea about MP3 slagging it. I'd love to see all these people who complain about losing dynamics and bass take an AB test on club systems. Let me explain real quick, it makes no difference at all where your track is peaking, MP3 won't cut out bit depth most of the time. The majority of size is shaved down by reducing the frequency range (sample rate) and then sometimes the dynamics will be reduced a little too AFAIK. You'll only notice this at 128, not even at 192 usually! Hi hats may sound a little crunchier at 192, but at 320, you can't even hear high enough (unless you can hear over 20 000 hz?) to detect the difference. The fact is, that a brickwalled and highly frequency focussed track needs the absolute LEAST bitrate of any material, Wav is just encoding data that ISN'T there, and specifically saying, "oh you know what, there are no highs in this track, but I'm gonna spells that out so your crappy CDJ300000s can understand that." A solo piano track with loads of dynamics and massive frequency range may get some advantage from being 320, but in a dance track, you could use 192 and no one would notice, let alone give a damn. |
Yes but in a club system? No chance you will hear any difference between 320 and Wav at all.
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| Originally posted by Sanguis Mortuum Of course there is, saying '320 is 1/5 the quality of wav' is completely meaningless...You clearly don't have the slightest, tiniest clue what the hell you're talking about. Wav does not contain frequencies much higher than hearing range, at 44.1khz sample-rate it contains frequencies up to the Nyquist, which is 22.05khz, this is why that sample-rate was chosen as the standard for CDs. You're right that in most cases it will be very hard to tell a 320kbps mp3 from a wav, but it is certainly possible there are differences inside the range of hearing, and even more so at 192kbps. |
-generator was his comments about brickwall limiting and stuff, just totally confused about the relationship between song dynamics (lack thereof) and reduction of bitrate...
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| Originally posted by kitphillips Don't think so mate. Most musical material falls within 16 000 Hz, anything out of that, is still perceptible, but will come through as crunchiness more than outright unpleasantry. Realistically, in a noisy club at 3 am, I doubt most people can hear beyond 16-18 000 hertz, you know how much ear ringing you get the next day from loud clubs. Also, taking into account that most systems (and SONGS!) have a sharp rollof above 12-13 Khz so there won't be many of these frequencies anyway. Sanguis, since you claim to have a better knowledge of it, perhaps you can explain better exactly what information is being removed in MP3 conversion? At 320, what is the typical maximum frequency you'll find etc. I'm always up for being proven wrong, but you haven't convinced me yet sorry. OH, and by the way, in Palm's reply the main -generator was his comments about brickwall limiting and stuff, just totally confused about the relationship between song dynamics (lack thereof) and reduction of bitrate... |
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| Originally posted by Sanguis Mortuum You're right that in a club it won't make any difference, nobody in a club will be able to notice. Im talking about listening on semi-decent monitors or headphones. MP3 compression is not simply throwing away frequencies too high or low to hear, although that is part of it; it also uses the idea of psychoacoustic masking to throw away frequency content, across the entire spectrum, that is masked by other frequencies. The way it works can also cause artifacts such as ringing or pre-echo, particular on more dynamic sounds such as percussion. |
there is a diffrent sound for mp3 and wav for shure oversample for one but i think its best to make your tracks the best you can before coverting over to what ever format you think is best.i allways aim for 192kb and 16 bit wav any higher just sounds a bit to oversampled to me. 
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