The early days of digital audio earned it a reputation for "different" sound quality, generally considered inferior to analog. Customers are generally resistant to change so held onto analog only audio paths longer than they rationally should have. Since the customer is always right multiple companies tried to deliver analog audio paths with digital controlled features. These were generally complicated and impractical.
I was friendly with one of these analog path only companies (APB) and it was a good business plan for them until the benefits of all digital audio paths became compelling economically. I was an old analog dog but relatively new to the dark (digital) side. I first designed for them a digital master section audio level meter (including my simultaneous "peak/VU" feature) that was superior to their former analog metering and actually cheaper to build. After that I helped them design a digitally controlled analog "automatic mixer". This was a good candidate for digital control because of all the computations involved in an effective NOM gain sharing algorithm.
I laid out my first (and only) prototype PCB with both (THAT) VCAs and DPOTs for each channel's gain controls. I populated the DPOTs first and they worked so well that I didn't bother populating the VCAs. I had incorporated hooks in the DPOT control software for zero crossing synchronization but the prototype didn't appear to need it. I saved the zero crossing feature for a later software upgrade if desired after stricter listening test. My suspicion is that the gain changes pushed to the DPOTs were so small and so frequent that gain change perturbations (like zipper noise) were not audible. FWIW I mostly listened to speech sources (coming from my TV), while I often used music sources for the cross modulation testing.
I was very disappointed when this project was dropped by the analog only mixer company as they faced growing competition from low cost but acceptable audio quality, digital audio mixer platforms.
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IMO this avoidance of digital audio in modern electronics is an irrational market perception (audio myth?) not unlike several other still around.
JR
In the early days of digital, we went through a lot of equipment from Otari/ Mitsubishi, Sony, Panasonic, Studer, Apogee,New England Digital, Tascam etc.many which used the same components, with many great producers and artists. We got different results that were acceptable or not, convenient or convoluted, sonic improvement or steps back. Which led to different solutions to different projects.
But, no one, even Wolf Deiter of Duetche Grammophone, ever refused to use a Neve console, (we had a VR). Maintenance problems, yes a few, mostly bad logic mux or demux CMOS chips, occasionally a bad cap in the signal path, (which Neve completely recapped the modules, it seemed like every year, but it seemed to be temperature related as that went down considerabilly after the ventilation of the desk was improved. (We routed an AC supply duct through the wire ways under the console. ) I had a chance to read the trouble logs from one of the Neve Techs, and 85% of them were addressed by reseating the modules, no kidding. Comparing a poorly maintained unmodified Neve module with a newly modified and refurbished module is also not a real comparison between the two IC's, when a flush and reseating of connections and patchbays, are enough to bring a noisy distorted module back up to spec.
As far as sonic quality, it was speculated at the time that with the coming of 24bit, 192KHz digital systems, that there would be practical equivalence of sonic quality between analog and digital systems; which at the time, (early 90's) only had a few working prototypes an early modified Nagra machine existed. Interestingly enough, some artists actually took advantage of digital grit as part of their sound in the 16bit/ 48KHz days especially in the Rap/HipHop world.
While it may be a good academic exercise to change out different IC's in a Neve, the difference will not be practically significant and there are other parts in the sound chain, Mics, Mic preamps, DA converters, AD converters, including the analog stages before and after the converters, and especially speaker monitoring systems. that will yield more significant improvements. And if you are doing all this to record Rap or Hip Hop, or anything which will have compressed distribution forms, it will all be kinda a waste as the grit is part of the sound. Modifications must be proved in working studio sessions with real musicians to fully measure success. Will it be appropriate for the medium or genre?