Just a couple things before I give up the fight. It obviously isn't worth continuing much longer.
My recordings do sound high quality to me & everyone who has heard them. I don't need 24/96 if I am not going to hear the difference.
You have extremely high quality microphones. Mine cost $100-$300. They sound great to me, but not as good as sample tracks I've downloaded that were made using mics like yours. Perhaps the fact that I don't have high dollar mics may be part of the reason I can't hear a difference between 16/44.1 and 24/96. I do record in 24/44.1 to make boosting the gain in post as noise free as possible.
I'm not trying to fight with you nor am I trying to tell you what does and does not sound good to your ears I promise.
My point is that you have the ability to record and keep a very high resolution recording. Be it from a $10 mic or a $10,000 mic. The fact remains that it is of high resolution quality which will only diminish if you diminish it.
Not hearing a difference between 24/96 and 16/44.1 is not to me a condition of how pricey your mics are but more of a question of what you're listening to those recordings on. What you may listen to your recordings on now may change in a month or in a year where you can easily tell the differences between the two. Then you'll kick yourself for not keeping a high quality version.
Especially for someone with one of the Korg units. Record in 1bit burn it off and dither to your hearts content.
Just a couple things. Some will disagree, but IMO its a complete waste of space to record at 96 Hz. To most people, there's no audible difference between 96 and 44.1, though some like to use 48. I assume you used 24 bit. That's important 'cause it allows you boost the volume in post without adding audible noise.
Back to the original statement here. You're suggesting here that it shouldn't be recorded in highest quality because "to most people..." Think of recording and backing up your high resolution recordings as future-proofing your tapes. You can also dither/sample down with mimimal quality loss but you can't go back up without significant quality loss.
A good example is HDTV. You watch a program where the content was filmed in 1080. Flip the channel to a different HD channel and the program was filmed in SD but upsampled to HD. "To most people...." they can tell a difference. Same applies with recordings and the benefits that increased resolution provides.