I have WAV files recorded at 48k 24bit with the Sony PCM-D50.
I have the Optical Digital cable to use the Output from the D50 to the Input on a Pioneer Home Audio CD recorder. The CD recorder has a built in sample rate converter to change the 48k to 44k. But the "users manual" has nothing in it about converting 24 bit signals input digtally and converting them to 16 bit before it burns it to CD-R.
I've made a couple of discs, so far they seem to playback fine and sound like the source WAV file. My ears cannot tell the difference between the CD-R and the original WAV file.
My questions:
is the method I'm using now a decent way to make this conversion from 48k 24bit to 44k 16bit?
is it possible that the 24bit isn't being converted to 16bit because the users manual only lists that the built in converter changes 48k to 44k and says nothing about 24bit signals that are input to the deck?
so is this an acceptable way to make CD-Rs or do you tapers recommend another way to create CD-Rs from my WAV files? I've read that some tapers use the computer and music software to change and make their high quality WAV files into CD compatible WAV files.
Thank you for any advice or thoughts and opinions to help me make better CD-Rs.