What do you need 192kHz for? There's barely much of a reason to go 96k even (assuming the converters are decimating/interpolating with decent quality). Those DVS things look nice though, I was thinking meh because RCA (unbalanced) and then I read "galvanic isolation".
Is it possible that Serato isn't applying RIAA equalization properly for their DVS? Slow scratching is supposed to sound deeper/warmer due to that. If they're just interpolating in flat response domain that would explain it.
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Like the right way to do this is to apply RIAA recording EQ to the songs, interpolate via DVS after that, then reverse the EQ.
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That would probably come down to how the timecode vinyl is mastered which I can't speak to personally. I know Serato timecode vinyl has something called a "noise map" beyond the 1000Hz control tone but that's about it.
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The mastering doesn't matter, because the timecode vinyl's only job is to inform the software of position (relative and absolute). The response to fast/slow scratching is down to the interpolation algorithm. "Noise map" is their marketing term for "an LFSR modulates the 1kHz".
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