3.5 mm auxillary port?
Found this. Hard to tell from the graphic but my guess is those three round ports are RCA IN for L/R audio and composite video:
Part #2 in the pic...
http://www.mbpartscenter.com/oe-merc...IvMaAkcl8P8HAQ
Last edited by Mike5215; Jun 1, 2016 at 11:00 PM.
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On the stock Burmester I'm not sure those files would sound great. Sometimes better source material just exacerbates weaknesses.
Hi res is the **** though. I have a Peachtree Nova 125 in the house. Amazing the amount of detail in a studio master.
Last edited by Mike5215; Jun 1, 2016 at 11:14 PM.
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Format too (FLAC/ALAC/AIFF etc.)
Last edited by Mike5215; Jun 23, 2016 at 06:35 PM.
Last edited by Mr. J; Jun 23, 2016 at 06:45 PM.
CD is a lossy compression of the original studio master, mainly because of the physical limitations of the disc, which has to compress the data enough to fit an album's worth of material on a single disc. (A single raw Hi Res track or two would fill up a CD. They're huge.)
So in the hierarchy of formats, MP3/AAC, then CD, then Hi Res. Basically, back in the 1980s when the CD was gaining traction, recording studios slowly went from 2" multi track tape to 24 bit digital with higher sampling rates than CD's 44.1k/sec. ( 48, 88.2, 96, 192 and 256k/sec)
As a result a lot of material was recorded at sample rates and bit depth greater than CD, and even the large format 24 track reel to reel tapes require better than CD quality to be fully digitized.
The CD of course is locked in to the original limitations of 44.1/16 bit in order to preserve compatibility. There have been some attempts to do better (SACD for example, which required a specialized player) but nothing caught on commercially. It really wasn't until DACs capable of decoding a studio master recording became commercially available and reasonably priced, and hard discs with the capacity to handle a large library of huge hi res files became common that the whole Hi Res thing took off.
My home system has a 12 Terrabyte drive I use for Hi Res files, as well as several hundred Blu Ray and DVD rips. In terms of quality, I happen to have a lot of the same material in multiple formats, which is handy for comparison.
For example I can listen to Hotel California on vinyl, CD, MP3, and Hi Res. Hi Res is phenomenally pure, with a massive dynamic range. You will literally hear stuff you never realized was present. It's less sanitized than the way you're used to hearing it, and you "hear" the studio space and it's clear you're listening to musicians and not just music. This is especially noticeable for recordings by bands that tracked live like The Eagles. (Tracking live means they all played and performed the material together. As a result you'll get little fragments of bleed over between the various instrument mics. The alternative is to lay down a single track at a time, get it perfect, and then add the next instrument track, get that perfect, etc. Usually the whole band isn't even present at one time. They pop in, record their track and leave. Boston, Steely Dan, Yes etc typically record that way.)
However, amazingly, vinyl is far and away my favorite source. Probably because I grew up listening to vinyl during rock's 70's era and that's how I'm accustomed to hearing it.
With a nice tube amp, a vintage table with a decent cartridge and a good preamp, it sounds the best to me. In the car, 256k AAC or 320k MP3 sound good, as does CD either on disc or streaming in full CD Res from Tidal.
Last edited by Mike5215; Jun 25, 2016 at 02:36 AM.





