It's August 23, 2025, 03:30:07 PM
On my headphones 320 CBR mp3 sounds cleaner when compared to VBR files. VBR mp3 files sound a bit like when a file is compressed twice - a sort of reverb in the playback like a very slight (almost unnoticeable) echo.
MP3 is a 'lossy' compression which means the smaller the kbps the worse the file will sound.320kbps is a good compromise to lossy encoding as you ensure the file sounds pretty much unnoticeably changed from real uncompressed CD audio.Wav is lossless so it'll sound as great as a CD but something like 4x the file size of a 320kbps mp3, and not all portable players can decode Wav's anyway.As a rule a file needs to be at lease 256kbps to sound close to real 'CDQ' but more complex audio (say Classical music or Jazz) needs a higher rate than 256 or it distorts, so 320kbps is a good way to ensure some of your tracks wont playback badly.I actually have 2 settings for my shit. I encode at 320bps mp3 for important stuff, and 160kbps VBR AAC for things I want on my laptop but wont be bumping etc.