Hello,
Firstly, this mail is a entry is a bit long but hopefully interesting
I have the misfortune to now be able to distinguish between MP3 at 320kbs and FLAC (ALAC) recordings. The difference between ALAC and MP3 at 320 kbs is not great it must be said but a worthwhile difference and, in some cases, a more significant difference (later).
My system is a Sony NWZ-A15 control unit outputting to an OPPO-HA2 DAC via the digital-out cable. This is the neater custom one available from Amazon.com - rather than the official Sony WMC-NWH10 cable connected to the supplied OPPO USB cable – which is messy. I have previously used the Fiio L5 cable but this only gives analogue out. Headphones were OPPO PM-3’s – so a decent setup.
Anyway, I kind of like MP3, as it’s more portable and smaller in size than a FLAC or ALAC file. The reason I use ALAC over FLAC is simply easier conversion via iTunes and for no other reason.
Data is synced to my Sony via Allway Sync which neatly handles any changes.
So, I decided to experiment with different file formats to observe any differences with them. This was to decide whether to re-rip my entire collection which isn’t a trivial task.
Amongst others, I used OMD’s English Electric which, apart from being a great album (way more mature than their previous poppy stuff) is well recorded.
I used tracks:
02 Metroland
09 Stay with Me
12 Final song (one of the catchiest songs on the album even though the last)
Track 09 is the most interesting especially at around 9 seconds when the song bursts into life with a kind of gurgly synthy bit – and that is the most important part to listen to during testing.
I ripped all tunes from the original CD several times using iTunes as follows:
-1- AAC – the default, with iTunes Plus setting (the best)
-2- MP3 at 320 Kbs
-3- Apple lossless
There is a 4th one I will detail in a bit.
I then isolated those tracks into a single directory and used a track number such that I could quickly flick between each track using the player to detect any differences. Program mp3tag was used for this.
The results are as follows:
ALAC compared to AAC. Unable to detect any differences.
ALAC compared to MP3. Difference detected at gurgly bit. It sounds fuzzy and indistinct.
Everything as expected so far except perhaps AAC which I was surprised at.
Finally, I decided to do one last test (for fun) using settings below in iTunes.
Stero Bit Rate320Kbs
Use Variable Bit Rate Encoding (VBR) - Checked
Quality - Highest
I would not expect any differences to standard MP3 at 320Kbs.
Wong! This is the one that most confuses me! It sounded better than ‘normal’ MP3 at 320Kbs and as good as ALAC. At the gurgly bit, this was a clear as ALAC and both myself and a friend could not detect a difference.
My conclusions
Standard MP3 is unable to resolve complex passages sufficiently. AAC handles these well along with VBR. Note that VBR appears as ‘320kbs’ when used with settings above rather than the mixture of sporadic bit rates you normally get.
Final thoughts
From my point of view I would therefore like to re-rip all of my CD’s with the above VBR settings but I don’t propose to do this until I am absolutely certain that my observations are correct.
Could someone possibly explain what is going on with the VBR bit and, perhaps, try this yourselves? And can you (honestly) detect a difference between that and ALAC/FLAC against my VBR settings?
Hoping you can put me out of my misery!
Firstly, this mail is a entry is a bit long but hopefully interesting
I have the misfortune to now be able to distinguish between MP3 at 320kbs and FLAC (ALAC) recordings. The difference between ALAC and MP3 at 320 kbs is not great it must be said but a worthwhile difference and, in some cases, a more significant difference (later).
My system is a Sony NWZ-A15 control unit outputting to an OPPO-HA2 DAC via the digital-out cable. This is the neater custom one available from Amazon.com - rather than the official Sony WMC-NWH10 cable connected to the supplied OPPO USB cable – which is messy. I have previously used the Fiio L5 cable but this only gives analogue out. Headphones were OPPO PM-3’s – so a decent setup.
Anyway, I kind of like MP3, as it’s more portable and smaller in size than a FLAC or ALAC file. The reason I use ALAC over FLAC is simply easier conversion via iTunes and for no other reason.
Data is synced to my Sony via Allway Sync which neatly handles any changes.
So, I decided to experiment with different file formats to observe any differences with them. This was to decide whether to re-rip my entire collection which isn’t a trivial task.
Amongst others, I used OMD’s English Electric which, apart from being a great album (way more mature than their previous poppy stuff) is well recorded.
I used tracks:
02 Metroland
09 Stay with Me
12 Final song (one of the catchiest songs on the album even though the last)
Track 09 is the most interesting especially at around 9 seconds when the song bursts into life with a kind of gurgly synthy bit – and that is the most important part to listen to during testing.
I ripped all tunes from the original CD several times using iTunes as follows:
-1- AAC – the default, with iTunes Plus setting (the best)
-2- MP3 at 320 Kbs
-3- Apple lossless
There is a 4th one I will detail in a bit.
I then isolated those tracks into a single directory and used a track number such that I could quickly flick between each track using the player to detect any differences. Program mp3tag was used for this.
The results are as follows:
ALAC compared to AAC. Unable to detect any differences.
ALAC compared to MP3. Difference detected at gurgly bit. It sounds fuzzy and indistinct.
Everything as expected so far except perhaps AAC which I was surprised at.
Finally, I decided to do one last test (for fun) using settings below in iTunes.
Stero Bit Rate320Kbs
Use Variable Bit Rate Encoding (VBR) - Checked
Quality - Highest
I would not expect any differences to standard MP3 at 320Kbs.
Wong! This is the one that most confuses me! It sounded better than ‘normal’ MP3 at 320Kbs and as good as ALAC. At the gurgly bit, this was a clear as ALAC and both myself and a friend could not detect a difference.
My conclusions
Standard MP3 is unable to resolve complex passages sufficiently. AAC handles these well along with VBR. Note that VBR appears as ‘320kbs’ when used with settings above rather than the mixture of sporadic bit rates you normally get.
Final thoughts
From my point of view I would therefore like to re-rip all of my CD’s with the above VBR settings but I don’t propose to do this until I am absolutely certain that my observations are correct.
Could someone possibly explain what is going on with the VBR bit and, perhaps, try this yourselves? And can you (honestly) detect a difference between that and ALAC/FLAC against my VBR settings?
Hoping you can put me out of my misery!