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JohnVo
Inspiring
July 27, 2017
Answered

record from pro usb microphone and vinyl help which sample rate?

  • July 27, 2017
  • 1 reply
  • 963 views

hi

i need to record from a pro usb microphone voice ,  and i need to record a friend of mine that plays violin with another expensive usb microphone on a different audio project (in short  i need to do 3 different job with 3 different hardware )

1) for a job i need to record only voice

2) about the vionil performance separate job , i need to record only violin no voice ,different microphone , no mix , need to record only her pre-audiition

3) third job rip some vinyls

and i want to rip some vinyls via usb ,a friend of mine give me for a while a pro-ject usb vinyl player

now , when i start audition cc and create a new audio file , i can select sample rate ,chanenels and bit depth

ok the default is

sample rate 44100

channels stereo

bit of depth 32(float )

i guess it's a good idea keep bit of depth 32float maybe for voice recording i can select mono

but about sample rate ?

about voice , violin and usb pro-ject player should i keep 44100 or raise to 48000 or up?

seeing i will edit these files

as you can understand i'm concerning mostly about sameple rate

thanks

This topic has been closed for replies.
Correct answer SteveG_AudioMasters_

No, stick with 44.1k unless your final result is for a video soundtrack. That's the only time you need 48k, as a rule. 44.1k gives you a frequency response that extends beyond that of humans already - you don't need to go any higher!

As far as the bit depth is concerned, if you record using the 32-bit settings, you get the most it's possible to get out of your sound device, which is 24-bit int. Audition stores this as 32-bit Floating Point, but with no scaling bits set until you alter the amplitude of your file. So basically yes, you're doing the right thing,.

1 reply

SteveG_AudioMasters_
Community Expert
SteveG_AudioMasters_Community ExpertCorrect answer
Community Expert
July 27, 2017

No, stick with 44.1k unless your final result is for a video soundtrack. That's the only time you need 48k, as a rule. 44.1k gives you a frequency response that extends beyond that of humans already - you don't need to go any higher!

As far as the bit depth is concerned, if you record using the 32-bit settings, you get the most it's possible to get out of your sound device, which is 24-bit int. Audition stores this as 32-bit Floating Point, but with no scaling bits set until you alter the amplitude of your file. So basically yes, you're doing the right thing,.

JohnVo
JohnVoAuthor
Inspiring
July 27, 2017

hi

No, stick with 44.1k unless your final result is for a video soundtrack. That's the only time you need 48k, as a rule. 44.1k gives you a frequency response that extends beyond that of humans already - you don't need to go any higher!

i have to deliver the violin pre-audiition in mp3 and flac in an usbstick

i don't know but for example lame mp3 encoder encode @48 as default , and many smartphone work @48k instead it's a good idea to play music on these smartphone @ 48k to avoid re-sampling and higher battery consume

thanks!

SteveG_AudioMasters_
Community Expert
Community Expert
July 27, 2017

Giovannivolontè  wrote

hi

No, stick with 44.1k unless your final result is for a video soundtrack. That's the only time you need 48k, as a rule. 44.1k gives you a frequency response that extends beyond that of humans already - you don't need to go any higher!

i have to deliver the violin pre-audiition in mp3 and flac in an usbstick

i don't know but for example lame mp3 encoder encode @48 as default , and many smartphone work @48k instead it's a good idea to play music on these smartphone @ 48k to avoid re-sampling and higher battery consume

thanks!

LAME encodes all of the standard formats equally, and you never reach the limit of even what 44.1k audio is capable of. As far as I can tell, 'most' smartphones work natively at 44.1 and upsample to 48k, FWIW. Makes no difference to the battery life, and the quality of all smartphones is so poor, that quite frankly, nothing you do makes any difference to the sound 'quality' anyway.