converting LPCM 5.1 -> DTS?
Reply #8 – 2007-09-27 18:56:11
That is the bitrate for 5.1 or even 6 or 7.1 channels though, so not totally insane compared to the 2 for MP3 :-) What I mean, is that at that rate, 1536 kbps for 6 channels is roughly, 256 kbps per channel. If it were an MP3 2-ch, it would be a 512 kbps file. If DTS uses distributes the bitrate similar to Dolby (kbps/channel x 5.33333) it's about 288 per channel. Which makes it 576 kbps for a 2ch file. * I took that 1/3 bitrate for the LFE from somewhere, don't remember where, but it was so long ago that I might be totally wrong, so don't take it as set in stone. The maths give you 448= 84x5 + 28x1 (LFE 1/3), 384=72x5 + 24x1 That's what I'm talking about. It's like saying that an MP3 or AAC file should be encoded at 512 kbps to sound well, when it's more likely that you won't be able to hear any difference above the 224-256kbps. Later If you can obtain an original uncompressed source (like the LPCM), decode it and recompress it to both formats, you won't notice the difference between the resulting AC3 and DTS files. That's a bold statement, have you actually done this? What bit-rates did you use? I've used 448 and 640 kbps AC3 and 768 and 1536 kbps DTS encodes from MLP sources. If you can hear a difference, then yay for you, man, your ears are way better than average. As macbear said, just ABX it and you'll find out if it's just a feeling or you can actually tell the difference between both. Later