If most people can’t hear above 15khz then this wouldn’t be audible surely.
It’s a very shallow roll-off starting around 2kHz. Depending on the content you’re playing, it can be audible under DBT conditions. I passed a DBT with a NOS DAC many years ago (and so have many others), it wasn’t particularly difficult, although I doubt I’d be able to do so these days.
If I’m understanding this correctly then, with actual music (old or modern) the ADC filter prevents aliasing and then when played back on filterless DAC there is no imaging?
The ADC filter does indeed prevent aliasing, however, “images” when converting back to analogue are not related to aliasing, as danadam stated. Aliasing is when frequencies in the input signal above the Nyquist frequency are mirrored down, into the in-band freqs (“in-band” meaning the freqs below the Nyquist frequency). When converting back to analogue “Imaging” is the reverse of aliasing, the in-band freqs are mirrored up, above the Nyquist frequency. In both cases, the solution is a filter that removes freqs above the Nyquist frequency: An anti-alias filter in an ADC that removes frequencies from the input signal above the Nyquist frequency AND an anti-image (or reconstruction) filter in the DAC that removes images from the output signal above the Nyquist frequency. Both filters are required.
I’m not sure how easy to understand my above explanation is, but hopefully you now understand that you will have images above the Nyquist point in the DAC’s output, even though the digital data input to the DAC has no content above the Nyquist frequency. As danadam also mentioned, unless these images are filtered out during the DAC process, there’s a good chance they will cause IMD downstream (in the amp and/or speakers). So the reason “
people say these types of DACs sound pleasant and smooth” is one or a combination of: A. They *might* be able to actually sense the very subtle high freq roll-off, B. They may be getting audible levels of IMD and somehow think that’s “pleasant” or C. Misleading marketing has led them to believe NOS DACs “
sound pleasant and smoother”, so that’s what their biased perception experiences/“hears”.
ADC does not prevent aliasing and that's why DAW is always sampled at 88.2 or 96KHz environment. With reconstruction, a filterless DAC is implementing a zero order old approach and you get imaging as you get near nyquist
None of the assertions in these two sentences are correct. An ADC does indeed prevent aliasing. DAWs are quite rarely used with a sample rate of 88.2 or 96kHz, by far the most common sample rate used is 48kHz, followed by 44.1kHz. And lastly, you do NOT “
get imaging as you get near Nyquist”, EVERYTHING below Nyquist (1Hz to 22.05kHz in the case of 44.1k sample rate) will be mirrored above Nyquist and indeed not just once but at multiples of the sample rate.
It does, but the harmonics (that makes up the timbre) in the actual music is has more amplitude than the image so you basically don't hear the imaging harmonics as much due to auditory masking
Again, no. You will not hear the images due to the fact they start above the Nyquist freq and are therefore outside the range of human hearing, nothing to do with auditory masking (which is the phenomena of frequencies within the audible band being rendered inaudible).
G