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I am thinking about buying a beovision 14 and using with deezer. But i am wondering if the tv automatically will switch the sample to 16/44.1 kHz (bit perfect) from the usual 48 kHz
Thank you
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Actionspeax: I am thinking about buying a beovision 14 and using with deezer. But i am wondering if the tv automatically will switch the sample to 16/44.1 kHz (bit perfect) from the usual 48 kHz Thank you
Not sure I understand your question?
Deezer is streaming 16/44.1/CD/RedBook standart compressed.
Where does the 'usual 48kHz' come into play?
MM
There is a tv - and there is a BV
Exactly, Deezer etc is 16/44.1 but tv/dvd/Blu-ray outputs audio in 48khz, so the question is if the the tv automatically adjusts the sample rate or just upsample everything to 48kkhz
Yes, a connection of an external device via HDMI often happens in 48kHz, but Deezer is an internal source, I don't see any reason for a convertion there.
What makes you think, that it will be upsamplet from 44.1 to 48 kHz in the BV14 before it will be decoded?
To be honest - the exact answer probably can only be given by the makers of the BV14/audio engine!
What makes me think it does it ?
Well most tvs on the market and the apple tv does it - Only one sample rate out so everything gets converted to match that.
Millemissen:RedBook standart compressed.
Please elaborate,- which compression would that be?
BEOVOX141: Millemissen:RedBook standart compressed. Please elaborate,- which compression would that be?
How hard can that be?
16/44.1 is the standart of a CD - if you take a file with 16/44.1 content and encode it with a lossy encoder (you name them), you will get a compressed file.
Apart from Tidal Hifi and Deezer Elite every streaming service is using 'lossy compression', but the origin was a 16/44.1 file.
That - however - is not the point of the op....
....he wants to know, what happens to the file in the audio engine!
Millemissen: How hard can that be? 16/44.1 is the standart of a CD - if you take a file with 16/44.1 content and encode it with a lossy encoder (you name them), you will get a compressed file.
It still doesn't explain what "RedBook standard compressed" is ?
The Redbook has a provision for emphasis but not for data compression, remember it was conceived more than 25 years ago!
It was merely to state the fact that streaming services use 16/44.1 content for their services.
Don't be nitpicking - I am quite sure you know what I meant ;-)
BEOVOX141: Millemissen: How hard can that be? 16/44.1 is the standart of a CD - if you take a file with 16/44.1 content and encode it with a lossy encoder (you name them), you will get a compressed file. It still doesn't explain what "RedBook standard compressed" is ? The Redbook has a provision for emphasis but not for data compression, remember it was conceived more than 25 years ago!
Ever hear a CD that was recorded with the EQ setup for emphasis but they forgot to set the bit to tell the player to take it out? Hooo boy, that was horrible. Bad enough I actually verified with my friend's digital recording setup that this is what had happened. What made it worse was it was a compilation disc designed to show off the virtues of CD! I'm betting it delayed the purchase of a CD for anyone who heard it.
Jeff
I'm afraid I'm recovering from the BeoVirus.