I have Winamp pro and it allows be to convert to a format called High Bitrate AACPlus and the major differences I am seeing between the two is wav is 1411kbps/44hz and AACPlus is 256kbps/88hz. Which one is of greater quality?
Be a part of the community.
It's free, join today!
Recent Reviews
-
I didn't think of TEAC when I began searching for a dedicated CD player. My initial short list included Denon, Cambridge, Marantz, Onkyo. The Teac intrigued me, so I went for it. It is very...
-
short terms: compact, loud, nice sounding, cheap ultraportables. detailed terms: AKG in the house ( fun, smooth, bassy, bright-warm & clear presentation ) cool for mainstream song...
-
Sennheiser HD-598s are the most comfortable headphones I've had the opportunity to use. I recommend these wholeheartedly for any first-time hi-fi buyer because of their excellent soundstage and...
-
I just received my SigPros (bought from a fellow head-fi'er), and now have several hours with them. They are great headphones. Agree with most of what everyone's saying about them. These...
-
Beats out the Bose Triport, the HD 202 and HD 435s, the AT M35 and AT M50. Just try it and see. Extremely comfortable (I wear mine while commuting and studying, for about 5+ hours a day). Bought...
Head-Fi Sponsors
Wav vs High Quality Bitrate AACPlus Encoding
- youngngray
- Trader Feedback: 0
-
- offline
- 192 Posts. Joined 10/2010
- Location: United States of America
- Select All Posts By This User
Well, I hope I'm not getting too technical here, slow me down if I am.
Ok.
1411 > 256 therefore the WAV is better.
Haha, kidding aside, the WAV file is the better quality. AAC and AACPlus are both forms of lossy compression that removes some of the musical information from a file in order to reduce the size. This is different from compressed files that are still lossless such as FLAC and ALAC.

Well, I hope I'm not getting too technical here, slow me down if I am.
Ok.
1411 > 256 therefore the WAV is better.
Haha, kidding aside, the WAV file is the better quality. AAC and AACPlus are both forms of lossy compression that removes some of the musical information from a file in order to reduce the size. This is different from compressed files that are still lossless such as FLAC and ALAC.
haha lol yea wav sounded better than aacplus too me but since winamp advertises it so heavily I wanted to know for sure lol. I obviously knew that 1411 > 256 it was more the x2 of hz that threw me.
thanks lol
i am using WAV too. The sound is good
- DaBomb77766
- Trader Feedback: 0
-
- offline
- 2,447 Posts. Joined 4/2011
- Location: outer space
- Select All Posts By This User
There's no reason why anybody should ever be using uncompressed audio files for general listening unless their player simply cannot support anything else. FLAC, ALAC or any lossless compression formates, really, will almost always be better to use.
- WrxSTI
- Trader Feedback: 0
-
- offline
- 151 Posts. Joined 10/2010
- Location: Croatia
- Select All Posts By This User
Certainly. There is also absolutely no reason why anybody should be using lossy audio files, and it's not even a matter of whether you can hear the difference (I'll admit I had a hard time distinguishing 192 vs lossless - this was on PC multimedia speakers though) but MP3 was invented back in the days when everyone used 8 GB hard disks. In this day and age, I see really no purpose in using mangled audio files when storing CD-quality songs is more than possible enough - I have a 1 TB hard drive + a 250 GB portable which is less than most people probably have, and I'm only using around 30% of the capacity.
Edited by WrxSTI - 5/16/11 at 8:55am
- DaBomb77766
- Trader Feedback: 0
-
- offline
- 2,447 Posts. Joined 4/2011
- Location: outer space
- Select All Posts By This User

Certainly. There is also absolutely no reason why anybody should be using lossy audio files, and it's not even a matter of whether you can hear the difference (I'll admit I had a hard time distinguishing 192 vs lossless - this was on PC multimedia speakers though) but MP3 was invented back in the days when everyone used 8 GB hard disks. In this day and age, I see really no purpose in using mangled audio files when storing CD-quality songs is more than possible enough - I have a 1 TB hard drive + a 250 GB portable which is less than most people probably have, and I'm only using around 30% of the capacity.
I'd say there's no reason anybody should use lossy files for archival purposes. However, if you're using lossless files on an iPod or other DAP it will eat up the limited storage space pretty quickly. I generally like having my entire collection on my iPhone so I can listen to whatever I want whenever I want...but even with lossy files I've already surpassed the 32GB limit on it. If I were using lossless I'd probably have about 1/3 of the songs on it...and it's not like the iPhone is an audiophile DAP anyway, so I doubt many would be able to tell a huge difference between LAME VBR MP3 and ALAC files.
I'd tend to agree if only there was a way to change the encoding used for the iPod/iPhone. It defaults to 128 when I'd rather it be at least 192. Oh well... And yes, given the output capabilities of the iPhone having lossless audio on there does seem a little silly. However, not much you can do. It's either highest quality or low quality.
- DaBomb77766
- Trader Feedback: 0
-
- offline
- 2,447 Posts. Joined 4/2011
- Location: outer space
- Select All Posts By This User

I'd tend to agree if only there was a way to change the encoding used for the iPod/iPhone. It defaults to 128 when I'd rather it be at least 192. Oh well... And yes, given the output capabilities of the iPhone having lossless audio on there does seem a little silly. However, not much you can do. It's either highest quality or low quality.
Yeah...I would press the "convert all files to AAC" if it at least had it set to 192 or 256. It's kind of retarded how it doesn't give you the option to change that, even though it does when you're importing CDs. Of course, converting lossy to lossy isn't good...my library is full of lossy files.
I just did it to see if the sound is so horrible that I can't deal with it. I don't use my iPhone for music all that often... However, I was able to load a significant amount of music on my iPhone because of that one check-box.
I wish it was a hidden setting that you could change...
- Wav vs High Quality Bitrate AACPlus Encoding
Recent Discussions
- › Best Sub $150 for ALL genres? 13 seconds ago
- › WTS: Macbook pro 13" 2.7 ghz i7-8gb RAM-2TB internal storage+... 1 minute ago
- › The New ATH-CKM500..The best CKM earphone yet. 2 minutes ago
- › Newbie Looking for Good Headphones 3 minutes ago
- › HeadRoom Grand 20th Anniversary Sale!! 3 minutes ago
- › Wolfson DAC confirmed for Galaxy S3! 5 minutes ago
- › Denon Officially Announces Its New Headphones! 5 minutes ago
- › Ultimate Ears Personal Reference Monitors: The *Custom* Custom... 6 minutes ago
- › Would I enjoy the Audeze-LCD-2/3? 6 minutes ago
- › Shure SRH940 8 minutes ago
Recent Reviews
- › TEAC PD-H600 Reference 600 Series CD Player by gonkulator
- › AKG K403 by eskimoo
- › Sennheiser HD-598 by TK277
- › Ultrasone Signature Pro Headphones by baglunch
- › JVC HA-S600 by pootispow
- › Audez'e LCD-2 Planar Magnetic Headphones by Squuiid
- › Superlux HD-668 B by BlackTea
- › Cowon C2-16BS 16 GB Video Player, Black with Silver by burninmind
- › BRAINWAVZ HM5 Studio Monitor Headphones by Night Crawler
- › Shure SE535LTD RED by sue4
New Articles
- › iBasso DX100 FAQ by DoctorHeadz
- › DIY Cable Info and Resources by Pingupenguins
- › Asr Head-Fi Threads Compendium by Asr
- › Headphone Buying Guide by keanex
- › Fostex T50RP modification summary LINKS - wiki by jgray91
- › Comparisons of the LCD-3 and the LCD-2 Rev. 2 by MacedonianHero
- › Posting Guidelines by Currawong
- › Comparisons of LCD-2 Rev. 1 and Rev. 2 by MacedonianHero
- › Membership Levels, Badges and Custom Titles by Currawong
- › Sennheiser Hd4 8 Modding For Newbies by koolkat
About Head-Fi.org | Join the Community | Advertise
© 2012 Head-Fi.org is powered by Huddler Tech | FAQ | Support | Privacy/TOS | Site Map






