•The goal is to get as much “coding headroom” as possible at each stage. This is achieved when you:
1.Use the most possible bits at each stage, with the least possible compression (for example, by lowering the sample rate, and using 64kbps rather than 56kbps connection), and/or
2.Use the more powerful coding method of those available at each stage.
At the moment, we offer the following advice:
•Use coders only where necessary. Consider the alternatives at each stage. With the cost of hard disk capacity falling, is it really necessary to crunch at that point?
•Use the maximum bitrate you can afford at each stage. Hard disk recorders and other studio systems often have an option to adjust this. For very critical work, remember that ZephyrExpress may be used in a mode where a mono program is split over two digital network channels.
•Get the Layer 3 advantage on low bitrate channels.
The people at Fraunhofer IIS, who developed the Layer 3 algorithm, have introduced a perceptual coding analyzer. This device has the potential of making objective measurements a reality. We’ll be hearing more about this.
Mixed MPEG Layer 2 And Layer 3 Signal Chains
What about the case where you will be using Layers 2 and 3 in a signal chain? It turns out that the two methods are nicely complimentary.
At low
But the ISO/MPEG people do not propose that a bunch of passes of Layer 3 be used. The idea is that Layer 3 be used at ISDN/SW56
This is why the ISO group decided to recommend the Layers as they did: Layer 3 for 64kbps/channel and Layer 2 for equal to or greater than 128kbps/mono channel.
Our own experiments with codec cascading confirm that this is the right approach: the two coding methods seem to complement each other. Two passes of Layer 3 sound noticeably better than two of Layer 2; a pass of Layer 3 followed by a pass of Layer 2 also sounds better than two of Layer 2. And we’ve had customers who have used a pass, or two, of Layer 3 followed by SEDAT without evident problems.