Selecting the VBR Quality and Mode for Variable Bitrate Encoding

  1. From the AudioCatalyst menu bar, select Preferences.
  2. From the Preferences menu, select Encoder.
  3. In the Encoder Preferences dialog MP3 Mode, select Variable Bitrate (VBR).
  4. In the VBR Quality field, select from the scale (table shown below).

VBR Quality

Variable allows you to select from a scale (Low to High) where Low represents about 96kbit/s, Normal represents about 128k/bits, and High represents about 192k/bits. Your MP3 file is encoded with variable bitrates throughout the file based on your selection from the scale.

VBR CBR Bitrate +- 10% Supported Channels Recommended Use
Low *96kbits/s Mono
Joint Stereo Stereo
Near CD-Quality
Good choice for portable MP3 Players (smallest file size).
Use when storage space is a consideration; when playback is performed with low-end sound equipment and listening environment such as portable players or car players.
Normal/Low 112kbits/s Mono
Joint Stereo Stereo
CD-Quality
Best choice for portable MP3 Players where file size is limited.
Normal 128kbits/s Mono
Joint Stereo Stereo
CD-Quality
Best choice for most users.
Normal use; similar to encoding moderately difficult to difficult content with a CBR of 128kbits/s.
Normal/High 160kbits/s Mono
Joint Stereo Stereo
Archival Quality
For high-end stereos (larger file size).
Compromise between Normal and High settings.
High 192kbits/s Mono
Joint Stereo Stereo
Archival Quality
For highest-end stereos unlimited file size.
Use when storage space is not a consideration; when playback is performed with high-end sound equipment and listening environment; and when heavy equalization adjustments might be used on playback.

*High Frequency not supported at this rate

In the MP3 Mode, mode field, select the mode - Mono, Stereo, Joint Stereo, or Dual Channel and then click the OK button.

Mono is a single channel of audio. Use the Mono setting with Mono sources.

Joint Stereo* (mode 1) - To create the highest quality MP3 file, Xing recommends always choosing Joint Stereo (mode 1) over Stereo. Don't confuse Joint Stereo (mode 1) with the Joint Stereo coding used for MPEG layer 2 encoding - it is not the same.

*Joint Stereo (mode 1) encoding for MPEG layer 3 allows the XingMP3 Encoder to use additional methods of encoding, specifically - MS Stereo (Middle/Side Stereo), and for lower bitrates only, Intensity Stereo, in addition to the Independent Channel coding used for Stereo. MS Stereo uses one channel to encode information that is identical on the left and right channels and the other channel to encode the differences between the two channels. Intensity Stereo encodes only bits that are perceived to be important to the stereophonic image. The XingMP3 Encoder uses Intensity Stereo only in low bitrate files 1(96kbps or less)1, where file size is critical to the user.

In Joint Stereo (mode 1), the Encoder dynamically (frame by frame) chooses the method of encoding that produces the best quality for each individual frame. Dynamic encoding improves compression efficiency which results in a higher quality file using less bits.

Stereo (mode 0) encodes the left and right channels independently. The total bitrate remains constant, but the split between the channels can vary. The XingMP3 Encoder uses this flexibility to improve quality by allocating more bits to the channel with the more dynamic signal. For MPEG layer 3 encoding, Stereo (mode 0) limits the encoder to only one method of encoding - Independent Channels. Because Stereo (mode 0) is limited to one method of encoding, Joint Stereo (mode 1) in most cases produces higher quality. In the exceptions, the Stereo (mode 0) quality will be essentially equivalent to Joint Stereo (mode 1).

Dual Stereo includes two completely independent encoded channels (left/right), each with half the total bitrate. In effect, it is two Mono files packed into a single file. Dual Stereo is generally only used for multi-lingual audio programs.