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Old 2006-12-12, 10:19 PM
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STLBlues STLBlues is offline
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Re: Is it possible to put 24 Bit PCM audio on a DVD video?

Hey rocknroll. DVD Architect will not support 24 bit audio, as you found out, it automatically dithers to 16 bit. DVD Lab Pro 2.0 will support a 24 bit, 48k audio track. I'm not sure about 96k, so I'd stick w/ 48k. It would seem it all depends on the capabilites of your receiver and DVD player. Here's a paragraph taken from a DVD Demystified FAQ:

Linear PCM is uncompressed (lossless) digital audio, the same format used on CDs and most studio masters. It can be sampled at 48 or 96 kHz with 16, 20, or 24 bits/sample. (Audio CD is limited to 44.1 kHz at 16 bits.) There can be from 1 to 8 channels. The maximum bit rate is 6.144 Mbps, which limits sample rates and bit sizes when there are 5 or more channels. It's generally felt that the 120 dB dynamic range of 20 bits combined with a frequency response of around 22,000 Hz from 48 kHz sampling is adequate for high-fidelity sound reproduction. However, additional bits and higher sampling rates are useful in audiophile applications, studio work, noise shaping, advanced digital processing, and three-dimensional sound field reproduction. DVD players are required to support all the variations of LPCM, but many subsample 96 kHz down to 48 kHz, and some may not use all 20 or 24 bits. The signal provided on the digital output for external digital-to-analog converters may be limited to less than 96 kHz and less than 24 bits.

Last edited by STLBlues; 2006-12-12 at 10:25 PM.
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