then, i dunno if you wanna hear this suggestion, but you might have to go
and convert everything to one sample rate and stick with that... i don't
even wanna imagine how much of a pain in the ass that would be, but it
really lets you avoid the whole problem if you just always stick to one.
good luck.

joe

-----Original Message-----
From: Brian J. Haag [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Sunday, April 14, 2002 1:28 PM
To: Drum & Bass Arena Discussion List
Subject: [dnb-prod] RE: sample rate question, i think ...


--- joe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> i don't use reason, so i wish i could give you a
> definite answer, but the
> theory behind it is if you're either "converting" to
> 44.1kHz or just
> "readjusting" to 44.1.  the first would mean that
> everything will sound as
> it did in 96, but at a lower sampling rate, and the
> second is that you're
> playing the 96kHz-sampled audio at 44.1... half its
> speed.  so i guess
> that's your answer, see if you can "convert" rather
> than just "replay at
> 44.1".

Yeah, I know what you mean.  My problem is that the
choice between the two isn't obvious.  For example, if
I've loaded a sample @ 44.1, then change my audio card
to 96, I should hear the sample at just less than half
its speed.  But if I loaded up the sample when the
card was *already* at 96, then it should work fine.

*shrug*

b

=====
Brian J. Haag
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

__________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
Yahoo! Tax Center - online filing with TurboTax
http://taxes.yahoo.com/

---
Drum&Bass Arena Producers Discussion List http://www.breakbeat.co.uk
You are currently subscribed to dnb-prod as: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To unsubscribe send a blank email to
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


---
Drum&Bass Arena Producers Discussion List http://www.breakbeat.co.uk
You are currently subscribed to dnb-prod as: [email protected]
To unsubscribe send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to