Comment by Anechoic
14 years ago
This:
Yes, but the effects of interference patterns between multiple ultrasonic frequencies is the same, and definitely does affect the audible spectrum
has nothing to do with this:
This is why we must filter the square wave that comes out of a DAC
The only reason that square waves "must" be filtered is to reduce the potential of damaging tweeters. If you want to record a square wave with the purpose of later reproducing the square wave, than you don't want to filter it - once you filter it, it's no longer a square wave.
OK, if you say so. I think you're misunderstanding a fundamental concept of digital to analog converters. But if you think it's just to prevent blowing your speakers, that's OK.
The reason that square wave sucks is because it introduces tons of high frequency content (your amp probably won't reproduce the high frequency content anyway, so I don't think most Japanese consumer amps will damage your speakers--that is, the amp will act like a filter anyway). That high frequency content then creates alias effects (think of moire patterns when looking at super high-res photos that are scaled down without anti-aliasing). Those alias effects sound like shit to the human ear.
The point of filtering is to anti-alias the resulting analog signal after conversion from digital to analog. The point of upsampling is to move that filter well beyond the audible range, so you can use a 1st-order filter (gentle slope, but it introduces no phase effects). The fact that a square wave hurts your speakers is inconsequential--the amp will effectively filter the signal anyway. Unfortunately, it will filter the signal without anti-aliasing, which introduces those nasty interference patterns within the audible spectrum (that is, if you feed a straight 44.1KHz sampled square wave to your speakers without upsampling/filtering).