I don't know how upsampling improves sound, but to my ears there is a big difference. I am not sure if eveyone hears the same difference as the frequencies are way above the range of human hearing. It is all to do with how the brain precieves sound and I believe this varies from individual to individual. The other big factor is the quality of the rest of the system. The Mscaler did little for me through 3.5K WAF speakers. I would not have bought it without a home loan.Geoff.R.G wrote: ↑Fri Jun 25, 2021 10:48 amI am intrigued as to how upscaling or upsampling make the sound better. As with burnt out highlights in a photograph, you can't put back what isn't there. If something important happens between samples it is gone. That applies whatever the sample rate, with analog you don't have that problem but you do have dynamic range limitations instead.CN211276 wrote: ↑Wed Jun 23, 2021 9:38 amInteresting, although the M-Scaler is beyond both my wallet and my own (self-inflicted) value equation. I've heard of some people upscaling before the DAC, using software. I can't remember exactly what, though.savvypaul wrote: ↑Wed Jun 23, 2021 9:18 am
I would concur that whether analogue sounds better than 44kHz 16 Bit digital is a matter of opinion. For me redbook digital sounded better, but for extended listening I preferred vinyl. The game changer for me is upsampeling. IMO it restores everything digital looses in terms of emotion. Lets face it, analogue has been going for over a hundred years and it took many decades to reach a standard anywhere near what we have now. Digital has only been around for little more than forty years and for me, with technological advances (eg the micro chip, high speed broadband and upsampling) it has now really come of age.
EDIT - I think it was HQPlayer
Rob Watts has said a lot about how upscaling works which a Google search will reveal. I 'm not sure if he is telling the true story amongst the marketing jargon. To summarise he says one million taps restores the original analogue signal. If the recording process was totally digital I find this a bit baffeling.