The real deal is what it sounds like in your air chain.For gosh sakes, get a demo and do it right..every thing from the console to the xmtr will play a part in your total air sound.Nothing new here.IMHO
The F Mister said:If they start judging your audio processors by a sample on the internet I agree with you Frank, I'm shore they won't, and if a box is set up badly and I ask what they are running, and they say "we use an Omnia One". What does this do for your image? You can't rule out every single thing that could set it in a bad daylight. Have a litle faith in us, that's what I mean.
stace said:This 'uploading clip' thing is good FUN. It's more of a competitive thing between the engineers that have set them up than a 'I'm going to buy a processor, I'll buy one based on the clips I download'. Who cares if they're mp3? I can still tell what sounds cool.
Robert Bass said:The one site I found where Orban provided processing samples, the files were not offered in the .wav format.
yeoldeschool said:However, by observing some simple quality standards, internet audio samples can be very fair. For example, if:
(a) the source audio is first digitally ripped to .wav format using something like EAC;
(b) the processor's input is fed that .wav via a sound card with a linear digital output (i.e., no change in sample rate or resolution versus the .wav's);
(c) the processor's output is captured with a sound card capable of sample-accurate digital input;
(d) the captured bits are saved to a lossless audio file format with no PC-based audio manipulation beforehand (i.e., not even normalization, since waveform editors typically add trace amounts of white noise to every manipulation they perform for anti-aliasing purposes);
(e) the person providing the sample identifies the factory preset used (and if customized, cites the exact deviations); and,
(f) the source .wav created in step "a" is also provided (as opposed to re-ripping the source CD, since this, if one truly wishes to be meticulous, can result in a different set of CD drive read errors),
... then one couldn't get much more fair.![]()
FFoti1 said:The F Mister said:If they start judging your audio processors by a sample on the internet I agree with you Frank, I'm shore they won't, and if a box is set up badly and I ask what they are running, and they say "we use an Omnia One". What does this do for your image? You can't rule out every single thing that could set it in a bad daylight. Have a litle faith in us, that's what I mean.
If the intent, among the group, was to share processed files for 'hobbyist' intentions, tI'd be a bit more understanding.
-Frank Foti
The F Mister said:But Frank, if one of your distributors here in the Netherlands would e-mail me offering a demo box for a week or so I would refuse it.![]()
FFoti1 said:If the broadcast medium were designed to operate as described in the quote, then it makes sense. But, a true evaluation must take into consideration the entire broadcast path. Internet sample files do not provide that.
Robert Bass said:I do not subscribe to the notion of such a thing as "lossless audio file compression".
yeoldeschool said:Granted. That's why I said this method is useful for demonstrating the "native" sound of a processor. As you pointed out, sample files can't replace hands-on auditions where a user can adjust the processing in real-time to see whether the box will produce what he personally likes. Nor can they offer accurate representations of what processor X will sound like in air chain Y. Nonetheless, there are many quality and performance aspects to processing that can be evaluated independent of individual air chain coloration, and any given sample file, properly made, can still demonstrate a processor's native sound for the specific processing settings used to create it.
Hope I'm not sounding combattive. Only trying to clarify my intent with the previous post.Samples would be an interim evalulation - but not the final, decision-making one, done with a hands-on demo.
yeoldeschool said:Case and point: when you demonstrate your Omnias at NAB, do you run them through miniature airchains and FM tuners? If you don't, then you're effectively "decoloring" your demonstrations; if you do, then you're coloring them differently than your buyers' air chains would. Regardless, in that environment, their native sounds can still be compared to those of your competitors' well enough to inspire hands-on demos later.
FFoti1 said:We sure do setup mini-airchains at the major tradeshows, and for all the reasons I have stated. We replicate the demo setup as close to the realworld. Is it *exactly* the same as what will be in a specific radio station? No, it's not, but it's a lot closer than the false results that are created by sampled-files.
FFoti1 said:Well, there really isn't a 'native' sound to these boxes due to the extreme flexibility they afford.
If you hear something you like, or don't like, you really will not know why.
Also, you are assuming that the sampled-files will be properly made. That's a real stretch. I have personally visited too many facilities, where the processing was supposedly 'properly' setup, only to find enough 'mistakes' in the setup that created poor performance. Since that happens in the realworld, what makes you think that these sampled-files will be properly produced? I highly doubt it.
Goran Tomas said:But honestly, I really don't know anyone in the right mind, who has a $$$$ in his pocket, is shopping for on-air processor that will not demo the units he can buy, but would instead make a decision based on downloaded clips? Maybe it's just me, but I don't think we should even be talking about that... It's that silly, not to mention irresponsible.
Goran Tomas said:But honestly, I really don't know anyone in the right mind, who has a $$$$ in his pocket, is shopping for on-air processor that will not demo the units he can buy, but would instead make a decision based on downloaded clips? Maybe it's just me, but I don't think we should even be talking about that... It's that silly, not to mention irresponsible.