RonaldDumsfeld
500+ Head-Fier
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Well in that case just post them up and see if anyone else can do it.
Well in that case just post them up and see if anyone else can do it.
There are also limits to what human beings can perceive as we are not test equipment. Did you null balance the two files? I suspect that you didn't.
Well in that case just post them up and see if anyone else can do it.
When you listen to the different files they do not sound the same. It's as simple as that. Top-end and some low-end are missing in the lossy files.
There was a guy who used to post here (UltMusicSnob) who could detect differences between WAV and MP3 in a piece of classical music with a very wide dynamic range.
Take a look at the spectrum in an audio editor. At 320 AAC most of the difference is above 18kHz where there isn't much music anyway.
Correct some things can't be heard, but people can hear very small differences. In the music industry mastering engineers are perfect examples of this.
If the audio level is the same the inversion of the wave would cancel.