Thanks Peter. Saw that back when and re-read it again over the weekend. The tests confirm Zoom's switching ADC architecture achieves the goal of extending dynamic range in a way which seems to be fully sufficient for our concert recording needs. And it somewhat explains how the same may not be true for some esoteric sound design uses due to the level of its noise floor modulating along with the ADC switching, which does not cause any problem for concert recording where the noise floor is fully masked by either the music itself or by other sources of noise in the signal chain at the levels around which the switching occurs. Presumably the results carry over to the Zoom recorders using the same or similar tech as the interface. Would love to see such an analysis done on the recorders TS members are using.
What isn't confidence inspiring is the parroting in the introduction of a marketing-driven untruth we've discussed previously, made without any backing attribution (as usual). That's unfortunately become par for the course in marketing materials but is inexcusable in a supposedly rigorous technical paper reporting test results. Would love to know if peer-reviewers of the paper (if any) called it out. This establishing statement made in the introductory paragraph struck me as admirably clear and precise:
"Ideally, the noise level would only cause the least significant bit to toggle while the maximum level would fully utilize all bits." Reading that I thought,
"Yes! That is the goal, clearly and concisely stated." [smiles] ..and based the limits of the device as explored in these tests, that easily fits within 24 bits" [raised eyebrow]. Only to be immediately let down upon reaching the second paragraph by the claim stating-
"Audio that is too loud will be clipped at the top of their waveforms while audio that is too quiet will lack fidelity or even be buried in the noise floor (see figure below).'' (< bolding for emphasis is mine) Clipped, yes. Buried in noise-floor yes. Lacking fidelity no. In making that claim, the onus is on the author to explain why digital sampling theorem suddenly no longer applies.
Making it more egregious is the inclusion of the misleading marketing illustration that follows, showing a stair-step output response at "weak signal" levels. Whenever you see that you should immediately be wary, because in making that claim (seemingly always without attribution) the author has almost always sabotaged their own credibility.
Scale up the analog output from any digital recording which was properly frequency limited to fit within the passband imposed by the sampling-rate (achieved via proper design of the ADC), and which, in the author's own words,
"Ideally, the noise level would only cause the least significant bit to toggle.." and and show me stair steps. There are none. The presence of noise sufficient to cause the LSB to toggle randomly eliminates low-level quantization error. Injecting dither noise if needed to achieve that has long been correct practice for an old problem solved long ago. The presence of additional noise further removes all possibility low-level quantization error occuring.
Otherwise, great to see these kinds of in depth test results and, ignoring that difficult to overlook bit of bs in the introduction, the testing seems good to me. Experts are welcome to correct me if I'm missing something in those results which might prove problematic for concert recording.
More on why the stairstep drawings are misleading and claims of "lack of fidelity" are bs here (great video made 12 years ago, link to which has been posted a number of times around TS)-
https://youtu.be/cIQ9IXSUzuM?si=-YpzlQRgKEOQIOIe&t=216Reaction / further-explanation to the above above (posted a 2 years ago, the truth is unchanged)-
https://youtu.be/cD7YFUYLpDc?si=aMevn5fMs8keOkmq