The actual files on the computer in the control room are WAV files, at 14,400 bps. If you have a big ipod or mp3 player, you can use this format with no loss whatsoever. The drawback is that these files are huge.
But using the default on itunes, it seems to work just fine. Remember that the actual binaural part of the signal is less than 0.5% of the total audio signal, and everything you are actually hearing is sound effects. You cannot hear the binaural beat, or waver, no matter how loud you turn it, and what format you use to transfer it.
I have a program called bavsa which decodes binaural recordings, lists the carrier frequency, the binaural beat frequency, and the percentage of the whole audio signal it is every ten seconds. It works great on the Monroe recordings (which I then duplicate using
www.bwgen.com with no talking on it).
Thomas