DTS on CDR
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ricob
Newbie
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12. February 2005 @ 12:59 |
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I tried to burn a DTS file (wav) on a CDR but I wasn't able to play the file on my Home cinemaset. The only thing i heard was noise. Do I have to convert this file first to something else? My cinemaset does play dts from a dvd. The AVR has a dolby dig and dts decoder on board the DVDplayer is connected through a coaxial cable.
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AfterDawn Addict
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12. February 2005 @ 21:02 |
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you cannot put a multichannel format such as DTS on a CDR. CD audio only plays stereo 44.1khz 16 bit PCM audio. your cd player was playing the cd you created as a data CD, hence the noise. Your only bet at burning a DTS file would be creating an Audio-DVD
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diabolos
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15. February 2005 @ 14:54 |
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Thats not entirely accurate.
read DTS as a codec (also check-out Coherent Acoustics):
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DTS
There are such things as DTS CDs but I don't think they can be read in anything but DTS certified players.
Ced
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AfterDawn Addict
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15. February 2005 @ 19:17 |
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wow thanks diabolos I had no clue DTS was possible on CD. my mistake.
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charlie-w
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17. February 2005 @ 11:51 |
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"There are such things as DTS CDs but I don't think they can be read in anything but DTS certified players. "
Not exactly true.
There is a difference between DVD's with DTS Audio and DTS CD's. The DVD's can only pass the DTS bitstream if the DVD player is set up to do so, but a DTS CD can be played back on ANY CD player. As long as the CD player has a digital output, and your amplifier can decode DTS, you're in business. It doesn't matter how old the CD player is, and it doesn't have to be "DTS Certified" as most DVD players are now.
I have several DTS CD's, and they can be copied just like any other CD.
This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 17. February 2005 @ 11:52
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diabolos
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19. February 2005 @ 13:39 |
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Quote: a DTS CD can be played back on ANY CD player. As long as the CD player has a digital output, and your amplifier can decode DTS
Since you need a digital out I would think that that would make it a DTS certified player. I didn't mean that it had to be special I just knew that it wasn't analog. I have heard mixed results with ripping DTS-CDs but if its easy for you then thats cool.
I'm also sure its possible to have a CD/SACD player that has 6 pre-amped out puts for amps that don't support DTS proccessing. That to me would make it a truly certified DTS player.
charlie-w, if you could explain to me or point me in the direction of somthing that could explain to me the difference between DTS on DVDs and DTS on CDs I would be very appreciative!
No prob. djscoop,
Ced
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Junior Member
1 product review
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19. February 2005 @ 14:25 |
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All, I'm a newbie to making DVD backups and a newbie to this thread, so please bear with me. First questions - what exactly is DTS? What is DTS an acronym for?
My goal - I'm using Shrink and Decrypter, trying to create a backup of my DVD movies with a working menu so that the backup doesn't automatically start to play when inserted into my pc or DVD player. I was told to try Shrink in Full Disk mode to get a working menu but that's not the real problem.
In Full Disk Mode I hit Open Disk. Shrink does it's thing. For my part under the Audio heading I put a check in the DTS 5.1-ch English and under the SubPicture heading a check in English-Normal Captions in case I'm making a backup of a movie with sub-titles in Elvish like Lord Of The Ring. No audio checks anywhere else. I've set Shink to automatically use Decrypter to do the rest.
When it's all finished, which takes roughly an hour for I,Robot and I try to play the movie in my pc first, later tested in my Panasonic DMR-HS2 recorder/burner with 40G hard-drive, plays DVD-R and DVD-RAM rewritables, I always get an error message saying something like neither my pc nor my DVD player can play the Audio portion of my backup. No problem with the Video portion, plays great, but no sound.
Any advice will be GREATLY appreciated.
Thanks, Mike
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bitbrain2
Newbie
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26. February 2005 @ 15:25 |
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sdifox
Member
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22. March 2005 @ 10:48 |
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DTS= Digital Theater Sound. The so called DTS CDs are not really CDs since they do not conform to the Redbook standard. It tricks the players into thinking it's a CD so the player passes the digital info along to the decoder on your receiver. Trouble is, your receiver may not recognize it automatically so if you set your reiver to dts mode, it should play. Assuming you did burn the DTS disc correctly.
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lillo74
Newbie
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6. April 2005 @ 02:56 |
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hello,
i have a problem. I have got some DTS-wav files. I try to burn them as cd-audio but the only result is a
1 Kb audio file. I tried different burning software.
can you help me ?
thanks a lot
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jjolson
Junior Member
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6. April 2005 @ 04:19 |
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Did you read and follow the guide?
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lillo74
Newbie
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6. April 2005 @ 04:52 |
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lillo74
Newbie
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7. April 2005 @ 06:27 |
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Is anybody on line?
I have followed the guide. I have tried to make dts and wav files using surcode. Obtained only noise. Using softencode the resulting AC3 file it's ok.
Somebody tells that DTS-wav files may be burned directly as audio CD, isn't it ?
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jjolson
Junior Member
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7. April 2005 @ 08:50 |
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You get only noise, where? If you're playing the files on a system without a DTS decoder it sounds just like noise.
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daphy
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7. April 2005 @ 22:51 |
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Hi,
every DTS-CD can be replayed by every 'normal' CD Player
under two conditions:
1. the player must be connected digitally to your amp -> single chinch or optical f.e. TOSlink (and this is the point where you stumbles)
2. the amp must be able to decode DTS (read manual!)
CYA Daphy
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lillo74
Newbie
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8. April 2005 @ 00:06 |
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thanx for the answer.
but I am not an unprepared. My DVD player is connected via optical link to my amp that has all codec(DTS; DTS neo 6; DD PLII ;DD EX and so on, I think it is a good amplifier!)
the question is :
my files are DTS-WAV with .wav extension. I can play them with VLC on my PC. GSpot says that they are wav files with 1411 kb/s (705/ch, stereo) bitrate and 44KHz sampling frequency.
when I play them with VLC, the property window tells me that the files are DTS audio type.
Hence my final purpose is to put DTS-wav file on a DVD and play them in my DVD player.
Someone says that all you have to do is to burn DTS-wav files on a CD as CD-audio. I tried it but it does not work. So I thought to follow the guide that was posted on the forum. Applying method 1, obtained dts files don't work, I heard only noise. Applyng method 2 AC3 files work correctly, but I do not know how to burn it on a DVD support.
By reading all around I learn that if I want to burn DTS on a CD it has be done with 44KHz file, while only 48KHz files can be burn on a DVD support, but what is the file extension?
thanx a lot
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daphy
Suspended due to non-functional email address
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8. April 2005 @ 02:44 |
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This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 14. April 2005 @ 23:41
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BTFSB
Junior Member
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10. April 2005 @ 20:48 |
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Did you try making a DVD Audio disk using Nero?
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daphy
Suspended due to non-functional email address
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10. April 2005 @ 22:00 |
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Quote: Did you try making a DVD Audio disk using Nero?
sorry no support of DVD-Audio at the moment :(
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Junior Member
1 product review
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25. April 2005 @ 22:15 |
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Hi all, sorry for long delay!! i haven't been to afterdawn in 2 months!! hope all is going well. tallguy53, mike
Tallguy53, aka Mike
Invest in and use DVD+-RW disks as you burn and learn.
Use high quality media after you understand the process.
Try to have fun learning to Rip & Burn and not get to frustrated.
Remember that the Addicts and Moderators werent born with those titles, they earned em! Theyre good people to hang out with and learn from.
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Alcides
Newbie
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6. May 2005 @ 14:50 |
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Hi, I donŽt want to copy DTS-CDs, IŽd like to make my own DTS-audio files to put them into a DTS-CD. I have a 24bit/96k audio device on my PC and IŽd like to encode my LPs in DTS-CD. How do I do? Thanks.
Hi, I donŽt want to copy DTS-CDs, IŽd like to make my own DTS-audio files to put them into a DTS-CD. I have a 24bit/96k audio device on my PC and IŽd like to encode my LPs in DTS-CD. How do I do? Thanks.
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sdifox
Member
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3. June 2005 @ 06:37 |
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You need a DTS encoder. You are better off with a DVD-A encoder.
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rstecca
Newbie
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6. July 2005 @ 09:09 |
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Gentlemen, this is what I know for sure. Hope it helps somebody.
Copying and playing DTS CDs:
Copy it just like any other Audio CD and play it with any CD player, except that the DTS decoder has to be able to recognize it. Example: PC with CD player running WinDVD 7 Platinum (WinDVD 7 Platinum trial can be downloaded for free). WARNING: Some decoders do not recognize DTS CD streams as DTS and so they don't decode it (I don't know why); in this case you'll hear only noise like 'shhhhhhhhh...'. For example, I tried DVD X Player 3.0 Professional and it didn't work.
Encoding DTS CDs:
It only makes sense if you're live and have a really good equipment. Otherwise you'll waste money, time and media space. You cannot have better quality just by converting .WAV, .AC3 or whatever to DTS.
If you still think this is for you, then you need something like Surcode, Steinberg or DTS Pro Series Surround Encoder Software.
Cheers!
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bigbwb
Newbie
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13. July 2005 @ 09:44 |
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I have been reading these various forums about placing DTS tracks onto a CD & etc. If I am reading it correctly it seems that If I use the DTS cd's and copy the tracks just like a normal CD, that I can make compilations of different music right? Does the DTS tracks remain in 5.1 surround if played on the correct equipment? ALso, I posted another question similar to this elsewhere and no one ever replied, why I do not know. I followed the directions for backing up an audio file from a DVD concert using DVDecrypter(in IFO mode & using the Demux feature). My question is can I chose the DTS version of the song or only the 2 channel mix, and IF I can use the DTS surround mix, how do I put that on a blank CD or DVD-R? Do I need to change it to a WAV file or what so that I can play it on a DTS capable player?
Any help on any of this would help. My software that I use is DVDecrypter and DVDshrink.
Thanks,
Brandon
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plutoz
Newbie
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3. October 2005 @ 13:02 |
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Quote: Copying and playing DTS CDs:
Copy it just like any other Audio CD and play it with any CD player, except that the DTS decoder has to be able to recognize it. Example: PC with CD player running WinDVD 7 Platinum (WinDVD 7 Platinum trial can be downloaded for free). WARNING: Some decoders do not recognize DTS CD streams as DTS and so they don't decode it (I don't know why); in this case you'll hear only noise like 'shhhhhhhhh...'. For example, I tried DVD X Player 3.0 Professional and it didn't work.
I have tried WinDVD 6 and 7 both don't seem to output anything through my SPDIF (using Onboard Realtek ALC650 chipset on Abit IC7 mobo) when playing a DTS CD (work fine with a DTS DVD however). I'm curious to know what soundcard/audio chipset those who got it to work were using (and if anyone has the same chipset as me and got it to work)
I'm using the latest ALC650 drivers from the Realtek site
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