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Thanks. That had been one of the theories I had contemplated. One catch, however, is that I suspect my existing DAT deck is only 16-bit. What I'd like to have is something a bit lighterweight to run during a session than firing up my computer. Both the SP-808 and the DAT meet that standard but both are 16-bit and both suffer from inadequate limiting. Mark on 12/7/02 11:18 AM, The CA4 Organisation at jl@ca4.org wrote: > > If you convert to digital with a reasonably good 24-bit converter > will have a larger dynamic range than any preceeding analog stuff can > reproduce. > > This means you should not be concerned with recording "hot" at all. > Recording hot is what you do with analog equipment and is a valid > technique there. > > I typically record so peaks are -16 to -18dBFS (that is 18dB below > digital full-scale). As 24bit gives 144dB dynamic range this means > that the noise level of any analog equipment will still be well above > the digital noise level. And leaving 16/18dB of headroom allows you > to do any post-processing with a very reduced risk of overload. > > Note that even the best 24-bit converters seldom have an analog > dynamic range anywhere near 120dB. > > If you are concerned with keeping every musical nuance intact then > make sure that any later bit-reduction to 16-bit (CD, MP3, whatever) > is done with only the best dithering algorithms (POW-r or UV-22).