The issue I take with everything you've posted is that you're trying to use your iPhone for playback. Sample rate arguably makes less of a difference in perceived quality. That's what you get when you go from 16bit to 24bit. There is potential for a large dynamic range with a greater bit depth. I know this thread is old but I stumbled upon it and I thought I would throw in my opinion on the subject. So, I hope this info helps anyone else who is trying to convert big HD music files for use on an idevice, and thanks to everyone for chiming in. Don't fully understand it all yet, but the sound is my answer for now. Whatever this converter is doing, it really works.Īnd, I really think bit depth is important, just like on our computers. I've been CRANKING Talking Heads Remain In Light, and it's blowing me away. I always thought it was my amp or speakers. The thing that really got my attention was that I was not wincing when the dynamics got intense, as CD's always seem to clip or distort when the going gets rough, or if the sound is dense (lots going on). The net result is sound, even in my car, that sounds far more rich and with clarity of detail that I've never heard on a CD. No, I didn't try AIFF, but the converter I used - MediaHuman Audio Converter, is running at 2300kbps, according to itunes, and in 24 bit, and I was able to keep it in ALAC. I jus tknow there are people with audiophile libraries who must be doing this regularly. i'm not a music snob, mp3's actually kind of hurt my ears, kinda like aural sunburn. I just can't believe there isn't a simple converter that won't do more than just evicerate the data and leave me with essentially the same shyte I could buy from itunes. I know they would be big files, that's fine. So, my original question was about whether there was a way, either native in itunes, or with an app, that I could simply convert these files down to rates supported by the phone (24/48, optimally). The phone will actually support 24bit/48k, which is a really big jump even from CD, and a giganti one from 320 AAC or mp3. Itunes supports these files, they play fine, and I have my MIDI output set to its max, which is 24bit/96k. I've got music that's 24 bit, 96k, with bitrates at about 3000 in ALAC (50k original). And this is just CD quality, 16 bit/ 41.1k sampling rate. The thing is, I can really hear the difference between 320 and CD, which is usually around 700-900 with ALAC for me. You now have the full version of MediaHuman Audio Converter (圆4) installed on your PC.Thanks, Chris - got it about the AAC, since the bitrate limit seems to be 320, I just lumped it in with mp3 (still learning about all this).Run MHAudioConverter-圆4.exe and install the software.If you don’t know how to extract, see this article. This might take from a few minutes to a few hours, depending on your download speed. Click on the download button(s) below and finish downloading the required files.How to Download and Install MediaHuman Audio Converter Intel, AMD or Apple silicon (M1, M2, M3) processors.Windows 11, Windows 10, Windows 8, Windows 7 for PC systems (32bit/64bit).MediaHuman Audio Converter System Requirements The main features of MediaHuman Audio Converter are: as well as in lossless formats like FLAC, Apple Lossless, AIFF, WAV (up to 32 bit). With it you can convert music in formats like MP3, AAC, WMA, OGG, etc. MediaHuman Audio Converter is a free application for macOS and Windows.
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