No I am not describing resolution there. Lack of precision leading to distortion yes. Bits are not resolution they are depth.Immanuel wrote:I see you describing loss of resolution there.medway wrote:bit crushing doesn't utilize dither so yes of course it will incur distortions.
But that 8bit signal will not have the same resolution = the same level of details and pureness as the original 16 or 24 bit signal. Therefor the bit count is not only about noise level.As I've said before dither randomizes distortion present when reducing bit depths so that it becomes non correlated to the signal, in other words it becomes noise. The signal is still harmonically pure, but with a higher noise floor.
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Alternatively if you have Wavelab you can set the master output to 8bit, notice the distortion, then turn on dither and hear the distortion disappear along with the resulting higher noise floor.
Resolution in context with computers is defined as:
"the degree of sharpness of a computer-generated image as measured by the number of dots per linear inch in a hard-copy printout or the number of pixels across and down on a display screen."
This has nothing to do with how bit depth works in defining an audio property.
Concerning the 8bit test: There is no loss of detail or pureness, as I stated the 8bit signal is harmonically pure, that means NO distortion. Even the Sony link talks about that, maybe you didn't read it so here it is in short
"dither turns a quantised numerical signal conduit into the equivalent of a naturally continuous (un-quantised) system, which exhibits a finite signal to noise ratio with no practical limit to harmonic signal resolution. In other words the inescapable presence of quantisation in numerical systems does not forcibly lead to 'discontinuity' or 'resolution loss' in the signal. Misunderstandings of this fact underpin many of the most damaging misconceptions surrounding digital audio systems. It can also be deduced from the above plots that any undithered digital representation of an audio signal is effectively illegal."
That means you have for all intents and purposes an analog signal with its accompanying noise floor.
You must get the attachment of "detail" and "resolution" our of your head when you think of bits. Bits determine the amplitude and therefor the dynamic range. Sample rate handles the frequency. That's it. You are attributing things to the function of bit depth that simply isn't there.
It just takes some reprogramming from all the myths and misinformation out there, especially contributed to by manufacturers to sell you the newest product.