Thanks for the info/links guys and the link to the previous post ... have a bunch of questions, but have to run out now.
But just quickly NOS Dacs (non-oversampling dacs) -- I'm confused I googled it and landed on this
which confuses me even more ... like upsampling is ok but oversampling is bad (or vice versa) ?
I thought a NOS was if it goes in at 44.1K it goes out at 44.1k, now I'm not sure if most sigma delta dacs oversample, up-sample, or both
The vast majority of DAC chips oversample seamlessly (i.e. they don't require any configuration, they just do it and it can't be turned off), and oversampling is generally a good thing (that's why almost all DACs do it). You have to actively look for a NOS DAC at this point:
http://www.audiostream.com/content/non-oversampling-nos-dacs-listOversampling "smooths" your existing data by interpolation (it guesses what the samples between the existing samples would be to get a smoother result). So, for example, 44.1KHz music wouldn't "acquire" any high frequency content through oversampling, you just get a smoother waveform. Upsampling (in software before sending it to your DAC) adds padded data to the top of the frequency range, but does not necessarily do the kind of interpolation described above (does not provide all of the benefits of oversampling). Upsampling in software is generally harmless (because the DAC will just oversample anyway), but in some DACs may actually prevent the DAC from oversampling. Most DAC chips oversample at much higher rates than the highest sample rate they're rated for (i.e. at 384, 768 or more), but I've read that some DAC chips don't have that oversampling "overhead." So by sending upsampled data (at the limits of the DAC) to such a DAC, you prevent it from oversampling and effectively turn it into a NOS (which may or may not be a good thing depending on how you feel about NOSs).
Then the author goes on the claim that a SACD uses a different master than the same recording for a regular CD...? Really?!
So what, the artist and producers re-perform and record the same music in the studio to make a second master?? Of course they don't. lol
They call it a "master" for a reason.
@Wungun: that part of the article is true for the SACDs I've personally heard. Upon researching the SACDs I've heard, every one of them was either a remaster or a different original master (and it shows if you look at the spectral analysis below 20KHz). Many early recordings had multiple sets of masters: an original master of the separate recorded parts, and a final "master" that was mixed and ready to press (King Crimson's Lizard, for example, had at least two masters, probably three). If you research individual SACD releases (read the reviews, forum background, etc.), they're very often a different mix of the album than the redbook version. Humorously, some SACD producers have even indicated that they do different mixes on SACD hybrid disks for the CD layer and the SACD layer, presumably to "confirm" the impression that the SACD format "sounds better," which seems like a really questionable practice. On the other side, there are also SACDs that are just upsampled 44 or 48 KHz PCM:
http://archimago.blogspot.ca/2013/07/list-suspected-44-or-48khz-pcm.html (although I haven't personally encountered any).
If you want to try an experiment, try converting an SACD rip to 44.1/16 and then burn it to a CD and give it a listen. I've never personally been able to tell the two apart, but some folks say they can. But try it for yourself and see.