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| quote: | Originally posted by thecYrus
it's not really important as the output is analog anyway and doesn't base on bits and khz. |
Wrong.
It outputs digital. Then performs a digital to analogue conversion at the end of the output stage. Sends the analogue signal to your soundcard input via a cable where the ADCs on your soundcard perform an analogue to digital conversion.
The internal bitrate and samplerate before the output stage of the Nord should be as high as fucking possible before conversion. Then the convertors need to be good and they need to oversample to avoid aliasing before the input. Which would suck if they didn't.
This is the thing about outboard which makes it suck if you are all digital. The number of times you convert from digital to analogue and vice versa. The more times you convert between them the shitter it sounds. Which is why, I don't recommend anyone uses outboard effects processors unless they have really fucking amazing converters - like serious Apogee Rosetta 200 type converters.
Otherwise you end up performing multiple DA/AD conversions before it even reachs the input of your soundcard. And you still have to perform another DA stage to output the signal to a speaker.
Real analogue is different because you skip the DA stage entirely before the input. Therefore direct line with analogue gear really means direct line. If you produce on a computer though you still need to perform an AD conversion at the soundcard input but 1 less conversion really makes the difference. Unless like I said before, you have shit hot converters.
Last edited by Derivative on Sep-04-2006 at 17:38
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