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Posted: Sat Apr 11, 2009 3:25 am
by johnboy01
Constrobuz wrote:on most equipment you wont hear the difference between 320 and 160 kbps, so if you have an +1 hour long mix, might as well export to 160, or better yet v0!!! save some disk space.
that little icon thingy of yours is fucking tight, son. wtf is that shit anyway?
how do i git me one a them icon thingy's beside mah name?
Re: QUESTION about bitrates
Posted: Wed Jan 13, 2010 8:35 pm
by wehlfest
Where does VBR's (Variable bitrates) fit into all this?
Not sure what these are about......
Re: QUESTION about bitrates
Posted: Wed Jan 13, 2010 8:45 pm
by USTD
VBR (Variable Bitrates) basically makes the tunes as good as a quality as they need to be.
Imagine this,
You've got a couple of boxes, ones labelled 320K and one labelled 160K. Some tunes wont fit into the 160K box because the depth of the files are too large, and they can't compress enough without reducing the quality a lot. These boxes are fixed values and called Constant Bit Rate (CBR).
This box represents CBR, no matter what sort of shit you put inside it, it will always be a 320K box.
VBR (Variable Bitrates) are basically what is known as shrink wrapping. Your stuff is placed inside a 320K MP3 box and then the lid is sealed and all the excess (air in this case) is removed. So in an ideal world you can have a smaller file size with the same quality.
Remember MP3's run on the same sort of technology as your .ZIP and .RAR files - compressing them. WAV's are uncompressed.
Some programs will always trim the edges though and well, you can't be too sure you're definately getting everything with an where a WAV will have everything you need, and everything you don't need too.
I hope thats understandable?
Re: QUESTION about bitrates
Posted: Fri Jan 15, 2010 1:48 am
by wehlfest
thanks! I've been starting to DJ at parties etc. and I was curious about this. I have a bunch of VBR's and it sounds like I am in good shape.