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Old October 28th, 2005, 07:28 AM
wulfrun wulfrun is offline
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Join Date: Jul 2005
Posts: 125
Quote:
Originally Posted by ManchesterUnited4Lif e
I have an iHP-120 which I use to record when I want the *best* results (via the optical in+.WAV). My H340 is used in most other circumstances, and seeing as there's not much difference between the '780 and the '340 in terms of recording options, I would hope my advice is pretty accurate;

Teacher's examples - 96-128KBpS
FM Broadcast (I assume you mean recording?) 128-320KBpS
Line in from Portable CDP - 192KBpS
Line in from Cassette tape - Highest bitrate (in this case 320KBpS)
Café performance - 160-192KBpS

For those I've left as variables, it's simply your decision as to which bitrate you feel comfortable working with. Personally, I record FM Broadcasts @ 320KBpS because it's what the player was already set up to do when I bought the unit - however, I've been meaning to scale it down to 128KBpS, solely because I now only use it to record songs for future reference (read; d/l later ) ...

HTH,

MU4L
As a general guide, consider that the sample rate determines the highest frequency that can be recorded, you have to sample at twice the highest frequency in the source. For speech, for example you don't need to sample more than 8kHz to keep 4Khz frequencies, which is enough. For music you need higher sample rates of 32 or 44.1kHz, these will keep 16 or 22.05kHz respectively (these are the *maximum* possible). Bit rate is another matter, try various settings and see what you're happy with.

Personally I use the following:

* For speech, 16kHz and 32k-bit
* For FM tuner, 32kHz or 44.1kHz and 128k-bit (actually, FM radio does not need more than 32kHz sampling since it doesn't contain >15kHz frequencies)
* For line-in, 44.1kHz and 128-256k-bit depending on the original's quality. For cassette originals, even 32kHz is probably overkill!
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