Alright, I will do that! Again, thank you so much for this, you have been of great help!blaubär wrote: ↑Sun May 26, 2019 11:51 amNo, it won't. Samsung's version of Pie doesn't support 96 kHz. It cannot just take it as it is.
It will take take it, but then either up- or downsample it using its own mechanism for this.
If you want to make sure that a higher frequency is used and the upsampling is done by Neutron,
let Neutron upsample and put out a supported sampling rate, then the os will take this.
[TIP] Hi-Res Audio for Android devices
Re: [TIP] Hi-Res Audio for Android devices
Re: [TIP] Hi-Res Audio for Android devices
Acoustic Research M2
With recommended settings Neutron resamples anything to 48000. What I see in Audio Hardware whatever content is playing.
DRV: AudioTrack (JNI) [LINE-OUT]
Frequency: 48000
Bits: 64(out: 16 int)
Latency: 240 (min: 21)
There is no options in Generic Driver
Frequency setting only list 48000, there is no other sampling rates
With recommended settings Neutron resamples anything to 48000. What I see in Audio Hardware whatever content is playing.
DRV: AudioTrack (JNI) [LINE-OUT]
Frequency: 48000
Bits: 64(out: 16 int)
Latency: 240 (min: 21)
There is no options in Generic Driver
Frequency setting only list 48000, there is no other sampling rates
Re: [TIP] Hi-Res Audio for Android devices
Why all of a sudden the "Hi-Rez Codec (Direct PCM) only does Maximum volume? How do I know the custom setting uses the Quad DAC in my LG-v30?
Re: [TIP] Hi-Res Audio for Android devices
I have a LG G7 thinQ running latest android v9. Which settings I must use for hi-res audio?
Re: [TIP] Hi-Res Audio for Android devices
Did you follow the advice in this topic ?
Could you provide information about your settings, e.g. screenshots of Settings > Audio Hardware ?
When you press the 3-dot-button on the playing-now-screen repeatedly you can gather information about the sampling rate and bit depth of input and output, what does it say there ?
Re: [TIP] Hi-Res Audio for Android devices
blaubär wrote: ↑Sun Aug 04, 2019 2:36 amDid you follow the advice in this topic ?
Could you provide information about your settings, e.g. screenshots of Settings > Audio Hardware ?
When you press the 3-dot-button on the playing-now-screen repeatedly you can gather information about the sampling rate and bit depth of input and output, what does it say there ?
It looks like it isnt that hires. Btw I raised the channel count just to try.
Re: [TIP] Hi-Res Audio for Android devices
Sorry, I don't understand that.
And I cannot access the image. If you want to append a screenshot, save it on your device, then add it with the "Attachments" tab here. If you don't see it, switch to "Full Editor".
Re: [TIP] Hi-Res Audio for Android devices
[attachment=0]Screenshot_20190804-10314 ... ttachment]
- Attachments
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- Screenshot_20190804-103144~2.png (110.39 KiB) Viewed 6252 times
Re: [TIP] Hi-Res Audio for Android devices
Yes, that's not high-res-output.
What about the settings in Settings > Audio Hardware ?
What about the settings in Settings > Audio Hardware ?
And what about Settings > Audio Hardware > Frequency ? Do you have a choice there between several frequencies ? And can you perhaps choose a higher one ?dmitrykos wrote: ↑Sun Oct 08, 2017 4:29 pmSince 1.97.0 version Neutron supports Hi-Res Audio output to the mobile devices which support it and have dedicated on-board DAC (ESS, XMOS, Qualcomm, ...) for Hi-Res Audio. The Hi-Res Audio must be supported by firmware of course. Minimum Android OS version is 4.4.
To make sure you have guaranteed Hi-Res Audio output (if device supports it) there are number of prerequisites in Neutron's settings -> Audio Hardware:
1) Generic Driver = ON
2) Generic Driver -> Hi-Res Codec = ON
3) Generic Driver -> Hi-Res Speaker = ON
4) DSP Effect (Device) = OFF
5) Low Latency = OFF
6) 32-bit Output (IEEE 754) = OFF
The easiest approach is just to reset all settings of Audio Hardware section to default (middle Undo button in the bottom of dialog).
Re: [TIP] Hi-Res Audio for Android devices
I noticed another thing : you use the speaker, not the headphones. While it should work with the speaker ( if Generic Driver -> Hi-Res Speaker = ON and the device and the os support this ), the chances are better for the line out with headphones - perhaps you could give that a try.
( There may be people walking the earth who can actually hear the difference between high-res and not-high-res. But they can surely not do that using a smartphone speaker. )
( There may be people walking the earth who can actually hear the difference between high-res and not-high-res. But they can surely not do that using a smartphone speaker. )
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