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This is the second Archived Forum which was active between 1st March 2012 and 23rd February 2022

 

Beomaster 7000 handle 24bits

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Legie
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Legie Posted: Tue, Sep 29 2015 5:11 AM

Hi,

I am trying to connect my iphone to Beomaster 7000. Before that, I would like to know if the DAC in Beomaster can handle 24bits/192khz as I understand now songs bought from iTunes are 24bits?

Many thanks for your help!

Legie

Playdrv4me
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Legie:

Hi,

I am trying to connect my iphone to Beomaster 7000. Before that, I would like to know if the DAC in Beomaster can handle 24bits/192khz as I understand now songs bought from iTunes are 24bits?

Many thanks for your help!

Legie

Beomaster 7000 doesn't have a "DAC" in it at all. It's just plain old analog inputs. 

http://www.beoworld.org/prod_details.asp?pid=375

To connect your iPhone you need a 3.5mm Stereo minijack to DIN cable, such as this one from Sounds Heavenly... http://soundsheavenly.com/apple/86--trs-5pd-.html 

There is no digital data transfer in that cable. Purely analog playing straight from the DAC in the phone. 

Legie
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Legie replied on Sun, Nov 22 2015 10:10 AM

many thanks. I will buy the cable!

Millemissen
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Legie:

as I understand now songs bought from iTunes are 24bits?

That would be new to me.

Source of information, please?

MM

There is a tv - and there is a BV

Killyp
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Killyp replied on Sun, Nov 22 2015 11:52 AM

The iTunes store uses 256 kbps AAC compression, which doesn't have a bit depth.

 

Bit depth refers to the number of 1s or 0s used to encode the difference between the loudest and quietest possible sounds in a 'standard PCM' audio stream. As AAC uses all sorts of clever compression systems to reduce data-size, there is no bit depth.

 

You may be confusing this with Mastered for iTunes, which is when a mastering engineer (the final person to attend to or modify a recording before it is released to the public) will follow a set of guidelines laid down by Apple, one of which is to submit a 24 bit audio file to the iTunes store, as opposed to a 16 bit 'CD quality' file.

 

This makes the AAC encoding better, but ultimately an iPhone or iPad is still going to turn it back into 16 bit audio at the end of the day.

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