Looper's Delight Archive Top (Search)
Date Index
Thread Index
Author Index
Support
Looper's
Delight!!

Looper's Delight Home
Mailing List Info
Looper's Delight
Looper Profiles
Tools of the Trade
Tips and Tricks
Musings
History of Looping
Loopography
Rec. Reading
Mailing List Info
Mailing List Archive
File Library

Support
Looper's Delight!
In Association with Amazon.com

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

Re: sample rate



im not arguing with u. and im not going to try to prove anything to u based
on my background knowledge, which u know nothing of.
but let me say this, u r also a victim of ur arrogance.

just suppose, just suppose that the high freq ur trying to reproduce is NOT
a sine wave but u still only have 2 points (a sawtooth wave), what then??
a sine wave??

what was the argument about? to prove ME wrong or to discuss the limits of
44.1kHz
u sound to me like the guy that would bring up last months argument when u
find urself at the losing end of todays with ur wife.

cheers
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Bill Fox" <billyfox@soundscapes.us>
To: <Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com>
Sent: Sunday, December 25, 2005 12:29 PM
Subject: Re: sample rate


> Adrian Bartholomew wrote:
>
> > this is where SOME info is worse than NO info.
> > dude think about it.
> > u have a wave at 1/2 the sample frequency. think about it like
> > connect-the-dots.
> > the only ones u can plot are the max(positive) and min(negative)
> > points of the wave. NOW connect the dots and what do u have. thats
> > right a sawtooth wave. even if the original was a sine.
> > but at least u have the frequency. forget about phase what about shape
> > or tone?
> > even if u sampled at a frequency high enough to give u three or even 4
> > points to connect, its STILL approximate, very far from the shape of
> > the original and certainly not "all the information of the original
> > signal".
>
> Dude, there is no connect the dots in a sampled system.  Electronically,
> the dots AREN'T connected.  The DAC outputs a stepped series of voltages
> that feed a reconstruction filter, i.e. an LPF.  This filter takes your
> so-called sawtooth, filters out everything above the LPF's pernamently
> set cutoff frequency and voila, you get a sine wave!  Think about it a
> minute.  The LPF is set to filter out everything above (0.5)fs, where fs
> is the sampling frequency.  fs is the first possible overtone of ANY
> waveform that isn't a sine.  What you think is a sawtooth is actually a
> square wave.  But you won't hear anything except the original sine wave
> being reconstructed.
>
> The lack of information or understanding is yours.  I can't give you the
> engineering background required to prove that I'm right.  You'll have to
> spend a few years first, learning higher mathematics andinformation
> theory.  But every CD player, every DVD player, every minidisc, DAT, and
> iPod prove me right.
>
> Cheers,
>
> Bill
>
>


Archive Top (Search) | Thread Index | Author Index
Looper's Delight Home | Looper's Delight Mailing List Info
This page is maintained by Kim Flint
contact us
Support
Looper's
Delight!!

In Association with Amazon.com
Any purchase you make through these links gives Looper's Delight a commission to keep us going. If you are buying it anyway, why not let some of your cash go to your favorite web site? Thanks!!