Comments on: Ultrasonic Dry Ice review https://theaudiospotlight.com/ultrasonic-dry-ice-review/ The Audio Spotlight is a hub that highlights composers, sound designers and other audio professionals from around the world, provides you with behind the scenes footage from game and film industry and keeps you up-to-date with the latest sample libraries and job opportunities. Thu, 18 Jan 2018 08:45:00 +0000 hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 By: Clément Roussillat https://theaudiospotlight.com/ultrasonic-dry-ice-review/#comment-1689 Thu, 18 Jan 2018 08:45:00 +0000 https://theaudiospotlight.com/?p=56378#comment-1689 In reply to The Audio Spotlight.

Ok thanks for the reply. I continue to investigate

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By: The Audio Spotlight https://theaudiospotlight.com/ultrasonic-dry-ice-review/#comment-1688 Tue, 16 Jan 2018 11:57:00 +0000 https://theaudiospotlight.com/?p=56378#comment-1688 In reply to Clément Roussillat.

Hi Clement,

It really depends on the conditions in which the sounds were recorded. Particularly, 8040 are fairly noise when it comes to frequency range above 20 kHz. Then there is also MixPre, although quiet, there is still chance of noise. It is hard to say really what is causing the noise in your case.

best,

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By: Clément Roussillat https://theaudiospotlight.com/ultrasonic-dry-ice-review/#comment-1687 Tue, 16 Jan 2018 09:02:00 +0000 https://theaudiospotlight.com/?p=56378#comment-1687 “Complete library was recorded with a Sanken CO100K, Sennheiser MKH8040
and a MKH416 at a 192 kHz and 24 bit. Higher rate means that you can
pitch and stretch sounds as much as you want and will almost always get
an interesting results thanks to Sanken microphone.”

That’s exactly what I wanted to do with a pair of MKH8040 and a MixPre6 and I did get a beautiful stretched sound but also very noisy in high range. I wrote to Sound Devices and they tell me it’s quantization noise.

How is it possible to stretch a sound without getting this noise? Is the MixPre the problem?

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