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Behavior At 24 Bits / 48 KHz

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With 24-bit quantification and a sampling rate of 48 kHz, the card begins to show what it can really do. These settings are an especially good compromise between performance and reasonable file size. As a matter of fact, they're frequently used in professional applications. Dynamics and signal-to-noise ratio naturally jump much higher.

Frequency response (20 Hz - 20 kHz) : +0.01, -0.19 dB Weighted signal-to-noise ratio : 112.6 dB(A) Distortion : 0.0005% Stereo separation : 101.2 dB


Frequency response : The frequency response widens very slightly at the top and is obviously still perfectly linear...


Noise level : 24-bit quantification shows the card's limits, with an extremely low noise level


Dynamic range : Dynamic capacity reached the maximum value possible given the other parameters!


Distortion : Distortion as such is on the same order as what we observed at 44 kHz. The lower noise level is what explains the difference in the figures (THD+N).


Intermodulation distortion : Values are still infinitesimal and there's no danger of distortion being audible


Stereo separation : There was a (relative) increase in stereo crosstalk in the upper part of the spectrum, but it's off the graph, below 1 kHz...

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