In Reply to: Maybe that's why multi-tracking seldom creates depth? posted by Commuteman on October 7, 2003 at 17:40:07:
Peter: ""We're obviously pretty sensitive to this, so I wonder what the threshold of audibility is?""In the 20 microsecond range..As, that has been demonstrated by test regimen..(well, I read the methods and couldn't pick them apart)...(means it was good enough that I couldn't find fault, but doesn't mean it's right)..
20 Micro is the timeframe for discerning 1 foot left-right at 10 feet, given speed of sound of 13k inches/sec, and a head 6 inches wide.(caveat:all this from memory..stuff's at work..memory is the second thing to go..forgot what the first was..)
Problem is...20 microsecond discrimination seems to imply 50 Khz bandwidth..which we can't hear..intersting dillemma.
Peter: ""I think Jon is alluding to slightly more sophisticated "pseudo-stereo" than simply using a pan-pot.""
Hence..my question..
TTFN, Some guy who has no clue what Blumlein is..but wears a t shirt with a bulls eye..
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Follow Ups
- Re: Maybe that's why multi-tracking seldom creates depth? - jneutron 18:12:06 10/07/03 (2)
- Re: Maybe that's why multi-tracking seldom creates depth? - macaque 05:55:07 11/04/03 (0)
- Alan Blumlein was the guy who invented stereo - Commuteman 23:23:07 10/07/03 (0)