We [well a couple of us!] had a vigorous discussion over in the Pristine Audio thread earlier. In there I was moved to comment on the use of Pre Emphasis as a means of dealing with SNR issues. I said this:
“As it happens, CD has a simple one pole PE function defined but I don’t think anyone uses it despite the fact that it will reduce the QD.”
Well, if you google the subject of PE in CD you’ll find some interesting information suggesting that my supposition might be wrong. One quote as example [source last edited last August]:
By the late 1980s, pre-emphasis stopped being used because reliable 16-bit DACs with oversampling and other technologies minimized the conversion & filtering noise without the need for pre-processing the recording.
Most major-label CDs with pre-emphasis were manufactured in Japan in the early and mid-1980s. Relatively recent forum posts indicate that pre-emphasis is still used on newly manufactured CDs by some indie labels, mainly for classical titles.
A pre-emphasis flag for each track is normally stored in the subcode along with the audio data. It's also supposed to be stored in the table of contents (TOC), but many CDs have TOCs that say there's no pre-emphasis when in fact the subcode says there is. There are also some CDs which people believe were mastered with pre-emphasis, but which have no pre-emphasis flags set at all.
and read this
The interesting thing is that if you play a disc that is electronically marked [in more than one place which will not help] as having PE then a compliant player sees the flag and does the right thing. If, however, you rip that disc, the flag may be missed and so the data that gets to your hard drive etc may not be De-Emphasised!! Unless the ripping s/w reads the flags and does the job digitally.
The question is: do CDs get the flags set these days or are they only older ones or from a few manufacturers? Although every little helps PE si not as important as it once might have been. To find out if a given CD has the flags one would have to read the TOC as well as other parts of the data stream. How to do that is described in some of the google results. If you use EAC for example there is means to see it. Does all ripping software see the flags?
So what? Well the resulting playback of that ripped .wav file will sound bright to the tune of a 10dB lift after about 3KHz to about 10.6 before flattening again. That should be audible. Does make you wonder about downloads of CD material which may be ripped and then be coded to MP3.
This will not apply to non-CD formats like 48/16, 96/24 etc.
Anyone out there who knows what the practice with PE on CDs is nowadays?
“As it happens, CD has a simple one pole PE function defined but I don’t think anyone uses it despite the fact that it will reduce the QD.”
Well, if you google the subject of PE in CD you’ll find some interesting information suggesting that my supposition might be wrong. One quote as example [source last edited last August]:
By the late 1980s, pre-emphasis stopped being used because reliable 16-bit DACs with oversampling and other technologies minimized the conversion & filtering noise without the need for pre-processing the recording.
Most major-label CDs with pre-emphasis were manufactured in Japan in the early and mid-1980s. Relatively recent forum posts indicate that pre-emphasis is still used on newly manufactured CDs by some indie labels, mainly for classical titles.
A pre-emphasis flag for each track is normally stored in the subcode along with the audio data. It's also supposed to be stored in the table of contents (TOC), but many CDs have TOCs that say there's no pre-emphasis when in fact the subcode says there is. There are also some CDs which people believe were mastered with pre-emphasis, but which have no pre-emphasis flags set at all.
and read this
The interesting thing is that if you play a disc that is electronically marked [in more than one place which will not help] as having PE then a compliant player sees the flag and does the right thing. If, however, you rip that disc, the flag may be missed and so the data that gets to your hard drive etc may not be De-Emphasised!! Unless the ripping s/w reads the flags and does the job digitally.
The question is: do CDs get the flags set these days or are they only older ones or from a few manufacturers? Although every little helps PE si not as important as it once might have been. To find out if a given CD has the flags one would have to read the TOC as well as other parts of the data stream. How to do that is described in some of the google results. If you use EAC for example there is means to see it. Does all ripping software see the flags?
So what? Well the resulting playback of that ripped .wav file will sound bright to the tune of a 10dB lift after about 3KHz to about 10.6 before flattening again. That should be audible. Does make you wonder about downloads of CD material which may be ripped and then be coded to MP3.
This will not apply to non-CD formats like 48/16, 96/24 etc.
Anyone out there who knows what the practice with PE on CDs is nowadays?
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