^
Oh, you's right!The chart with both Axes goes down to -110.
And the question "why so much noise/distortion/artifacts" remains.
don't think it's quite fair to characterize the data as "why so much noise/distortion/artifacts" though, when the Axe-Fx is clearly performing better than the competition.
this is why people don't play the guitars they have.
i meant more about playing music, rather than developing skills.Like, because some of them do not focus their interests around perfecting guitar playing skills? How dare they!
i meant more about playing music, rather than developing skills.
Can you post the results of your other “competitor” (kr vs hx vs axe fx)?
I don't miss all the hiss and radio frequencies one bit...
Are you sure it’s your amp picking up RF interference, not the guitar? Because, you know, guitars can make all kinds of funny noises into an Axe just as well.
Are you sure it’s your amp picking up RF interference, not the guitar? Because, you know, guitars can make all kinds of funny noises into an Axe just as well.
Aliasing is the creation of signals at new frequencies that didn’t exist in the original signal. The new frequency becomes an alias of the original frequency. Aliasing is caused when a signal is sampled at a rate that is too low, and/or the low-pass filtering that's applied to the original signal (anti-aliasing filter) isn’t optimally designed or implemented.I hardly understand this stuff.
So, aliasing, is like, harmonics that affects the intended signal and makes it less clear and realistic?...
Did I get it right?
III vs II vs other thing:
III: blue
II: magenta
Are you telling us that in 2012 the II had less aliasing?
@FractalAudio I see! Can you explain what is the 10kHz peak exactly though? Is it technically possible to get rid of it?