SNR of MP3, Split from Topic ID #96702 |
SNR of MP3, Split from Topic ID #96702 |
Aug 28 2012, 18:37
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#1
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Winamp Developer Group: Developer Posts: 662 Joined: 17-July 05 From: Ashburn, VA Member No.: 23375 |
The LP noise floor is rather high- maybe -70dB under very good conditions. 12-bit sampling (RMS noise floor of -72dB) would be sufficient for LP use as long as your levels are right (peak signal above -6dB). (12-bit sampling was used for DV but hasn't seen any other widespread use). The SNR of an MP3 is around 25-30dB. Does this mean that I only need to decode them to 6-bit PCM to capture all the details? I am curious if anyone has ever done a detailed analysis of an LP's SNR in different frequency bands. This post has been edited by benski: Aug 28 2012, 19:07 |
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Aug 28 2012, 20:20
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#2
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Group: Members Posts: 3080 Joined: 1-September 05 From: SE Pennsylvania Member No.: 24233 |
The SNR of an MP3 is around 25-30dB. I don't know why you say that. The dynamic range of mp3 is obviously much greater than 30 dB. I would be more inclined to describe mp3's deviation from the original as distortion rather than noise, because it is quite capable of rendering very quiet passages with very little added noise. |
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Dec 29 2012, 19:04
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#3
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Group: Members Posts: 84 Joined: 14-December 12 Member No.: 105171 |
Anyways, anyone who ever heard a 6-bit PCM file knows this is funny. 6-bit PCM is incredibly noisy and it is the equivalent of the rough maximum resolution you can do with digital audio on the PC Speaker. Yes, I mean that little tiny beeper.
Here is a short part of a 192 kbps mp3 bitcrushed to 6-bits: http://www.hydrogenaudio.org/forums/index....showtopic=98564 |
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Lo-Fi Version | Time is now: 20th May 2013 - 03:08 |