Gary, I also feel that this may be an arbitrary standard. I may have been one of these who asked the question, based on comments I've heard. Of course, many say that wav is the best, but when I listen to music, or even spoken recordings, the quality may vary from recording to recording, and maybe this is all subjective at best. This is just only my opinion. Just weighing in. ----- Original Message ----- From: "Gary Petraccaro" <[email protected]>
To: "PC Audio Discussion List" <[email protected]>
Sent: Wednesday, April 28, 2010 10:26 AM
Subject: Re: bit rate and sample rate


I tried a book I was reading for a bookclub on the Stream, and was able to go all the way to 32-bit mono. Now, I could hear a difference between that and
128 mono, but, to my aging ears, it was slight.  I figure that the
commercial spoken recordings issued as mp3s are at 128 and keep recordings I
want to keep at that standard, but it's strictly arbitrary.

----- Original Message ----- From: "Kevin Minor" <[email protected]>
To: "'PC Audio Discussion List'" <[email protected]>
Sent: Sunday, April 25, 2010 5:31 PM
Subject: RE: bit rate and sample rate


Hi.

Some out there will disagree with me, but that's all right.  I think that
for recording just speech, CD quality is overkill. Personally I would use
64 KBPS with 44.1 Khz sampling, in mono.  I don't think you'd notice much
of
an improvement with higher bit rates, and in fact you might be able to go
even lower, to 32 kbps, but you might notice some artifacts creep into the
picture.

As I said, this is for just speech recording.  Music is a completely
different animal. I personally use 128 kbps mp3 files at 44k sampling. I
know it's not CD quality, but I personally like my files at a constant
value, and this sounds good enough for me.

Have a good day, and don't work too hard.

Kevin Minor
[email protected]


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