It could be the same trackIndeed, which is why I'm surprised that some discs also have an AC3 track you can select from the menus. That means two AC3 tracks on the disc, why?
It could be the same trackIndeed, which is why I'm surprised that some discs also have an AC3 track you can select from the menus. That means two AC3 tracks on the disc, why?
I can't say I've seen this on a Blu-ray Audio disc. However Blu-ray movie discs often offer multiple lossy Dolby Digital tracks for different languages.Indeed, which is why I'm surprised that some discs also have an AC3 track you can select from the menus. That means two AC3 tracks on the disc, why?
Out of interest... What software's did you use to create these encodes?For anyone curious, I created multiple mixdowns of a song that is 5:04 for the sake of comparing the sizes:
TrueHD Atmos = 227MB
---------------------------
TrueHD stereo = 62MB
TrueHD 5.1 = 152MB
TrueHD 7.1 = 199MB
AC3 (640 kb/s) = 23.1MB
They could be bitwise identical, but they may have to be two separate copies. Nothing I've seen says one of them can point at the other.It could be the same track
DME (Dolby Media Encoder)Out of interest... What software's did you use to create these encodes?
I have a thing with outputting Quad into my Sony STR-DN1080 (budget 5.1.2 Atmos receiver) from my Oppo 103, where the Sony won't recognise the Quad and defaults to stereo unless there is a silent center channel present, very annoyingI’m no expert, but I doubt it.
I have noticed that my quadio discs can start in audio modes that are inconsistent. Right off the bat I can’t state which, but my Oppo 105 can show me which stream is being decoded. Not to mention the on-screen display on the quadio itself. That leads me to believe that the disc has “default” information on it that the disc player follows.
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