The music on CDs was not recorded at 44.1kHz, but 48kHz. The sample rate for the recording studios was 48kHz until somewhat recent times (think DAT). Only when the CD was mastered was it downsampled to 44.1kHz for the CD format. Incidentally, the 44.1kHz sample rate for CDs was chosen because Sony wanted to be able to use VHS video format as a medium for transport of audio masters (keep in mind that when the CD format was being designed by Phillips, the hard disk sizes were in the single-digit megabyte range). The 44.1kHz sample rate fits nicely into the television frequencies of the VHS tape. To be honest, I don't remember the details of why it is so, however the back issues of the Journal of the AES have all the details you might want.
Thanks for the recording history lesson but I don’t see what that has to do with what you quoted or the fact that I have a cd not dvd audio collection. I would still have to upsample to make use of 96khz 24 bit equipment.
That is not what I said at all. It seems that you have created a strawman to argue against. However, I will say that I am not an audiophile. For numerous years in my career, I was an Audio Engineer. A card-carrying member of the Audio Engineering Society.
http://www.aes.org/The reason I sad you were speculating as to the source of this noise was because the only way to know for sure would be to listen to the card outside of your pc to eliminate the offending EM and see if the sound changed. Process of elimination, I’m going to go out on a limb and say you didn’t do that. What you heard could have been caused by any number of things, might even be a driver issue. Or please tell me how else you eliminated other causes?
I wasn't missing the point at all. That you now say "($730.00 with Radio Shack cables). " verifies my initial comment on this thread. And that comment was that paying $150 for cables on a $1k system was a waste. Indeed, if you had originally said "Hi-Fi on a budget for $730, we would not have had this conversation.
No I said “a complete hi-fi pc system for
$830.00 ($730.00 with Radio Shack cables)” What’s in the parentheses is your idea. Besides you switched arguments on me. Sure spending over a grand on a dac would offer a much greater improvement than $150 speaker cables but this is a budget system so you don’t have a grand for the dac1, or thousands more for better speakers and amps. That’s why I say your missing the point. You have the 100 you saved by using cheaper cables. So where would you spend that 100 bucks.
If you get the Radio Shack high-quality cables, you'll get some good cabling for a reasonable price. The connectors are made of a material that does not fatigue, so the shell of the RCA plug maintains a tight (oxide-free) connection to the jack. The gold plating also reduces oxidation. The shielding is also very good. What the cables lack is a marketing budget, like the one that Monstar cables have.
Very well said and I mostly agree however I think there is room for real improvement and the clarity labs emberglows are much better speaker cable at a reasonable price. I wouldn’t pay more than $150 though.