I originally considered posting this in the Too Easy II thread, but after consideration, I'm no longer certain it belongs there. Also, posting it in its own thread allows me to give a detailed reason.
Very recently, in addition to JRiver's own audio dithering mechanism, a TPDF dither mechanism has been introduced. The dither mechanism that will be used can be chosen from the Zone's audio options page.
Currently, though, the Parametric Equalizer (2)'s Bitdepth Simulator only has a checkbox to switch dithering on or off. I presume that this means that it will use the Zone's dither mechanism if it's enabled, which should be fine for most use-cases. However, I'd like to switch the dither mechanism of the Bitdepth Simulator independently from the Zone's, so I'd appreciate a way to choose the Simulator's dither.
I realize that this sounds strange, but my reason for wanting this is the following:
I have a USB-to-SPDIF converter with an ASIO interface. The converter supports up to 24-bit data, which is fine because I can tell JRiver to output only 24 bits of meaningful information in its ASIO settings. However, I know that the headphones I have connected to that converter only use 16 bits of information, but I have found no option to make JRiver output 16-bit data via ASIO.
For that reason, I have set a Parametric Equalizer 2 with a Bitdepth Simulator (16 bit with Dither) as the last DSP step. This works for my headphones*, but after reading that
effectively, TPDF dither becomes better as the difference between input and output bitdepth increases, I would like to try it, paired with JRiver bitexact dithering to 24-bit for ASIO output. I hope that makes some sense. If it doesn't, I'm willing to explain what I mean.
I've been thinking that maybe, instead of a checkbox that specifies whether to dither or not, a drop-down menu like in the Audio options page for the dither mechanism could be used instead?
* In fact, it even works for my headphones with pure 24-bit output, but I believe (no blind tests done) that I hear a difference between 16-bit with dither and 24-bit. I'd usually attribute this to placebo, but some time ago, I tried the same thing sometime using my TV's speakers, expecting to hear a difference, but I could only barely hear a difference at around 8 bit without dither. So I definitely didn't expect this... make of that what you will.