On 16/08/06, Toralf Lund <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> I somehow doubt that there is much to gain from improving the A/D,
> though. Seems to me that the real issue is noise already present in the
> analogue signal, and also dynamic range limitations also on the analogue
> side.

Absolute subtleties may be recorded with better resolution (ie noise
floor which may lead to  more effective post processing noise
reduction) using an ADC of greater bit depth. However when compared to
my experience in precision audio recording technologies I can honestly
say that generally the quality of the source material is the absolute
overriding quality constraining component in the recording chain.

IE a cassette tape transcribed from the best cassette deck will sound
no different when replayed from a 44kHz/16bit recording or a
196kHz/24bit recording. In other words if the output range of the
sensor is being fully serviced by a 12 bit ADC then adding more
resolution will do very very little to improve the final output. And
the fact that we are likely to see a sensor of higher pixel density
than the 6.1MP APC sensor that we are so used to if theory is to be
believed we will only see poorer noise performance. Anyone who has
bought the new improved model of a film scanner which ultimately still
used the same sensor but ramped the ADC up from 14 to 16 bits per
pixel will probably appreciate my position.

I'm all for maintaining an open mind but physics being what it is
leaves me doubting about the potential for radical improvement under
the circumstances. I can't see me selling off my 67 gear just yet.

-- 
Rob Studdert
HURSTVILLE AUSTRALIA
Tel +61-2-9554-4110
UTC(GMT)  +10 Hours
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://home.swiftdsl.com.au/~distudio//publications/
Pentax user since 1986, PDMLer since 1998

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