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amazing miracle device
Paul wrote:
"Eiron" wrote in message snip So you don't understand CIRC. Correct. That may be why I have not mentioned it!!! I am talking about CRC - Cyclic Redundancy Check. CRC is employed on data files. It is a check sum if you like. It ensures that data retrieved from CDs or harddisks is 100% accurate. If a sector read produces an incorrect CRC then it is read again. Multiple attempts will be made before the source is considered unreadable. This is *not* employed on audio CDs - the data is simply streamed - good or bad. Try the 'hole' experiment and it should become clear to you. You may also like to try it on a data CD to illustrate the point - ruined disc. I know the theory. A 2.3mm gap in a track will be reconstructed exactly using CIRC (Cross-interleaved Reed Solomon) decoding. That means bit perfect, whether data or audio. Any bigger gaps in an audio CD may be interpolated so you don't hear the gap. So I drilled a 1mm hole in a data CD. It reads perfectly with no sound of reseeking, no error messages, no problems. Look, if you enjoy the product that vinyl delivers then fine. How many times do I have to say it? My 'problem' is that I will only be satisfied when I get the highest fidelity that technology will allow. It would be great and I would be 100% in your camp if vinyl and a mechanical retrieval system achieved that. It doesn't, it can't and it never could. That should be obvious to all. However, if vinyl gives you what you are looking for then brilliant. Honestly, fill your boots! I would not try and turn you from it. However, please don't tell me that it will give me what I am looking for. I want High Fidelity which cannot be attained through mechanical means. There's no need to put me in a camp. I don't listen to technology. I listen to music and use the turntable for my pre-1985 albums where I have no CD of the album. Is that good enough for you? Now how about your search for the ultimate in hi-fidelity? Give us all a laugh and tell us about your amp and speakers! -- Eiron No good deed ever goes unpunished. |
amazing miracle device
In article , Paul
writes I do wonder if you've heard either at its best. I have a Revox reel to reel with a Dolby SR unit around it which gives results as near as dammit to 16 bit PCM. FM radio can also be pretty good - although these days the dreaded optimod type devices often ruin it. Ok, I will take your word for it being very good. No I'm not taking the mick - Revox have made some bloody good kit. In fact I would love one for little jobs in my home studio - but not for Hi-Fi. I don't even use tape for acoustic instruments - I go straight to harddisk. By your own admission it only comes close to 16 bit PCM. It therefore falls short of what can be obtained and misses the mark for me. If you have read my earlier posts you may understand why this has no place in my agenda. Paul Paul mail me off group please!.. -- Tony Sayer |
amazing miracle device
Erm... Well, I think the point Eiron was making was that the audio CD
format does, indeed, include various forms of redundancy which is then checked and used to correct errors. The main layer of this is CIRC. This is rather more complex than plain CRC, but one of its functions is equivalent to CRC. I have no problem with that - always willing to learn. I am talking about CRC - Cyclic Redundancy Check. CRC is employed on data files. It is a check sum if you like. It ensures that data retrieved from CDs or harddisks is 100% accurate. Erm... no error detection and correction system can do that. With all real systems there is a finite chance of an undetected error or errors. My poor English! I didn't mean errors can be corrected - If you can't read a data disc without error it's game over. It's purpose is to 'know' when read data is bad. If it were possible to correct then it would have been done. If a sector read produces an incorrect CRC then it is read again. Multiple attempts will be made before the source is considered unreadable. The same approach can be employed when replaying or reading audio CDs. This is a function of the playing system, not the disc format. This is *not* employed on audio CDs - the data is simply streamed - good or bad. I am not certain which of two meanings you have in mind above when you use the phrase "employed on audio CDs". If you are referring to the format in which data is represented on the audio disc: It is not correct to say that the information recorded onto audio CDs is "simply streamed". Audio CD employes quite a complex and powerful set of systems for redundancy and error detection and correction. If you don't understand CIRC then you may not know the details of this, but it is present. Indeed, this is why you can drill a 'small hole' in the information layer, yet then be able to read the audio information with no actual errors or loss to the audio data. No actual errors or data loss????? Clearly there are errors and data loss. I assume you are suggesting that the loss can be 'rebuilt' to be 100% as the original? I feel if this were indeed possible the computer industry would be using it. What may be possible is interpolation. This may be acceptable for audio but disaster for computer data. In the case of audio, we are still left with corrupt, inaccurate information. Clearly then, this is of no help in the search for High Fidelity. It is interesting to read the CRC from an audio CD. Play a track and note the CRC value. Play the same track again and see if the CRC is consistent. I use Audiograbber to do this little test. But if you are referring to the method used by the player to read that information pattern from the disc: Note that some audio players use the same method as you describe for data discs. They read at high speed, and re-read if they detect an error they decide they can't correct without more reliable information. The original Philips documents specified that a hole up to 2.5 mm in diameter in the information layer of an audio CD would result in no actual audio data loss or errors - provided that the disc was otherwise fine. If you go above 2.5, and up to a maximum of 7.5 mm then some data will be 'lost' and the reader will have to interpolate. But that isn't nominally required for Red Book discs for a hole of less than 2.5 mm track-length. For a small hole, therefore, the audio data recovered should be the same as if no hole were present. However Philips/Sony didn't have drilled holes in mind when they arranged this. :-) In part, they wanted to cater for poorly made discs, partly for specs of jam placed on the disc by the user, and partly for brief losses of tracking or focussing whilst the player reads a disc. Hence even though most domestic audio players read the disc at x1 rate with no 're-tries', they still do not have to actually read every single channel bit from the disc. They can accidentally 'miss' bursts of discs *and the result following error detection and correction will generally be the intended audio data with no errors.* This is the purpose of the systems Philips/Sony built into the Red Book specs. 'generally be the intended audio'? Not good. FWIW I had thought that data discs would be similar in this respect. The point being that the data is redundantly interleaved along quite a length of 'track' - thus catering for 'bursts' of data loss at the information layer level. However I've not seen specs for this for a Data disc, so can't comment on the details. But in both cases the channel bit stream isn't simply the 'streamed' audio/computer data. Again, if there was any way of reconstituting lost or corrupt data then the computer industry would be using it. While there is a lot of data interleaved on a harddisk (timing data for the motor etc) I do not know if this is true for CD. However, I don't think there is duplication of 'real' data on CD. Note that one of the problems for computer data discs is that the user generally wants to read data from them at far higher rates than are required for audio CD replay. This requires high disc speed, and hence much shorter response times for the track and focus servos in the reader. This in turn means that reading the disc reliably becomes harder than at a slow speed. And this may be one reason why for computer data use, re-tries are useful. Computers have the luxury that, within reason, it doesn't matter how many re-tries are made to retrieve data accurately. Computer data must be correct. Interpolation in this context would be catastrophic. Our ears, on the other hand, will not accept a pause in the music while multiple retries are performed. I would imagine that a not inconsiderable buffer would be required to allow for re-tries. No need to do this. We know it is not a clone or anywhere close. It has been butchered by the RIAA filter in an attempt to make up for the inability of a mechanical system. The RIAA filter is reversible, as is done in any phono preamp, and is therefore not butchery. What is your point? If it isn't broken, why fix it? My point, hopefully, is crystal. Afraid not - at least to me. Ok. FWIW The use of pre-emphasis and de-emphasis is quite common in communcations engineering. It does not signify that a system is 'broken'. Just that pre-whitening according to the noise and maximum levels as a function of frequency can optimise the available dynamic range, and hence the available level of precision. FWIW some audio CDs also employ pre-emphasis as this is part of the Red Book spec. This does not mean the resulting CDs are 'broken'. As Keith G would probably be happy to confirm, I am not personally that much of an enthusiast for Vinyl LP. In practice I prefer CDs for various practical reasons. So the above is not intended to 'defend vinyl', just to clarify the situation wrt CD. Phew! To clarify my position. I want The Highest Fidelity that technology will allow. I have never claimed perfection for any method of sound storage/retrieval/presentation. My quest would be over and I could sleep peacefully if I had. As far as retrieval goes, I do know which gets me closest though. Paul |
amazing miracle device
There's no need to put me in a camp. I don't listen to technology. I listen to music and use the turntable for my pre-1985 albums where I have no CD of the album. Is that good enough for you? Now how about your search for the ultimate in hi-fidelity? Give us all a laugh and tell us about your amp and speakers! Please read my other posts!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I have no desire or reason to wish to place you, or indeed anybody else, in any 'camp'. I don't listen to technology either. What on Earth would be the point in that? (Rhetorical.) I listen to music too! I also have a turntable for the exact same reason you do! Here we go. Now it enters the 'my cock is bigger than yours' phase. Alarm bell Degeneration begins. As I made clear at the start, I am not willing to play that game. I'm out of here. Thank you to those that taught me something - I honestly do appreciate it. Paul |
amazing miracle device
On Tue, 1 Aug 2006 22:12:55 +0100, "Paul" wrote:
There's no need to put me in a camp. I don't listen to technology. I listen to music and use the turntable for my pre-1985 albums where I have no CD of the album. Is that good enough for you? Now how about your search for the ultimate in hi-fidelity? Give us all a laugh and tell us about your amp and speakers! Please read my other posts!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I have no desire or reason to wish to place you, or indeed anybody else, in any 'camp'. I don't listen to technology either. What on Earth would be the point in that? (Rhetorical.) I listen to music too! I also have a turntable for the exact same reason you do! Here we go. Now it enters the 'my cock is bigger than yours' phase. Alarm bell Degeneration begins. As I made clear at the start, I am not willing to play that game. I'm out of here. Thank you to those that taught me something - I honestly do appreciate it. Paul Paul, I know your news reader will do it, so do you think you could reconfigure it so at attributes quotes? It is impossible to tell whom you are replying to right now. d -- Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com |
amazing miracle device
"Paul" wrote in message ... There's no need to put me in a camp. I don't listen to technology. I listen to music and use the turntable for my pre-1985 albums where I have no CD of the album. Is that good enough for you? Now how about your search for the ultimate in hi-fidelity? Give us all a laugh and tell us about your amp and speakers! Please read my other posts!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I have no desire or reason to wish to place you, or indeed anybody else, in any 'camp'. I don't listen to technology either. What on Earth would be the point in that? (Rhetorical.) I listen to music too! I also have a turntable for the exact same reason you do! Here we go. Now it enters the 'my cock is bigger than yours' phase. Alarm bell Degeneration begins. As I made clear at the start, I am not willing to play that game. I'm out of here. Thank you to those that taught me something - I honestly do appreciate it. Paul Oops, missed a bit out (again). If you must know, mine is a Rhode Island Red - Beat that :) Now I really am gone. Paul |
amazing miracle device
Oops, missed a bit out (again). If you must know, mine is a Rhode Island Red - Beat that :) Now I really am gone. Paul |
amazing miracle device
Paul wrote:
Oops, missed a bit out (again). If you must know, mine is a Rhode Island Red - Beat that :) Now I really am gone. We know you have a cock and pullet but you really should try drilling a 2mm hole in a data cd to disabuse yourself of your fallacies. -- Eiron No good deed ever goes unpunished. |
amazing miracle device
"Paul" wrote in message ... Is *what* me? Are you making the mistake of thinking I *don't* have about 500 CDs, 15,000 MP3s and 500 DVD-Videos here? (Not to mention DAB and FV radio, two 'media computers' with DL DVDRW drives, a selection of digital PVRs, STBs, CDPs, DVDPs and a couple of Digital Projectors....???) You'll be joining the ranks of those here (OK, one clown actually....) calling me a 'Flat Earther' next.....!! Keith, I have no idea what you have. Yes you do, I've just told you (see above) - the point I'm making is that although I greatly prefer vinyl for *serious* listeng, I have a *rake* of digital gear here for music/computing/AV purposes.... Trust me, I have no intention of calling you anything - I don't indulge in such nonsense. In fact, should this discussion(?) degenerate to that level (as many seem to do) I'm out of here! So you (oops) keep saying! My 'problem' (obsession?) is that I want a system that will get me as close as possible to the original sound. Nobody here would have a problem with that.... |
amazing miracle device
"Jim Lesurf" wrote snip As Keith G would probably be happy to confirm, I am not personally that much of an enthusiast for Vinyl LP. In practice I prefer CDs for various practical reasons. So the above is not intended to 'defend vinyl', just to clarify the situation wrt CD. Woah! I'm sorry to say I'm probably not the most avid reader of your sometimes long, *technical* posts Jimbo, but I found this one interesting and was rewarded with a bit a mench at the end for my efforts!! :-) Yes, I'm happy to confirm that you do *not* appear to be the most enthusiastic vinyl user here, from the odd remark you have posted on the topic!! ;-) |
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