04-21-2022, 08:40 PM
(This post was last modified: 04-21-2022, 08:44 PM by H3r0n_M45t3r.)
Why is that?
Max Camilla DSP samplerate is 384kHz, that should result in 384kHz for 48, 96, 192 kHz files, and in 352.8kHz for 44.1 88.2 176.4 kHz files.
If resampling is configured to adhere to base frequency (which in case of files that cause problems is 44.1kHz) then it should result in possible resamples of: 88.2, 176.4, 352.8, 705.6.
Settings used by me in SoX are 384 and 768, which have the same base frequency of 48. But In case of 44.1 files, resampling should adhere to this file's base frequency (if that option is enabled, which it is) to avoid aliasing. Using 384kHz resampling works correctly and produces 352.8 for 44.1 files. But with 768 (still adhering to base frequency!) it ignores the base frequency and force upsamples 44.1 files to 384, introducing aliasing.
Max Camilla DSP samplerate is 384kHz, that should result in 384kHz for 48, 96, 192 kHz files, and in 352.8kHz for 44.1 88.2 176.4 kHz files.
If resampling is configured to adhere to base frequency (which in case of files that cause problems is 44.1kHz) then it should result in possible resamples of: 88.2, 176.4, 352.8, 705.6.
Settings used by me in SoX are 384 and 768, which have the same base frequency of 48. But In case of 44.1 files, resampling should adhere to this file's base frequency (if that option is enabled, which it is) to avoid aliasing. Using 384kHz resampling works correctly and produces 352.8 for 44.1 files. But with 768 (still adhering to base frequency!) it ignores the base frequency and force upsamples 44.1 files to 384, introducing aliasing.