Here are some threads that address most of what you want to do (I see that you have posted in one so I know you have done some research already) I can't comment on the quality of the recordings you mention.Ī special mention to user smst, who did the heavy lifting to get DTS and DD tracks to work on SB with 5.1 surround setups. PhilDualdisc is technically a CD on one side and a DVD or DVD-Audio on the other so you should be able to extract the DVD or DVD-Audio side the same way as a conventional DVD or DVD-Audio.Įxtracting a DTS, or Dolby Digital, track and playing back on a SB system is well documented in this comprehensive thread Fleetwood Mac - Rumors ) so you will need DVD-Audio Explorer for those discs even though you are primarily interested in extracting the high resolution 2 channel tracks.Īnyway, I've noticed some other formats of interest and wondered if these can be ripped and if the audio quality is worthwhile: Some DVD-Audio discs have all of their tracks (surround and 2 channel) encoded/secured with MLP (e.g. Think of the difference between DVD and DVD-Audio discs and the ability to extract tracks from them this way ĭVD-Audio Explorer can extract MLP encoded/secured information (only DVD-Audio discs use MLP).ĭVD Audio Extractor can extract DTS, DD and PCM encoded information from DVDs and from DVD-Audio disc tracks that are not MLP encoded/secured. DVD Audio Extractor will be able to extract everything on the DVD side of the disc and any non MLP encoded/secured tracks on the DVD-Audio side. Things may be different for the Pet Sounds DVD-Audio disc you have in the UK but the disc I have is DVD-Audio on one side and DVD on the other. DVDAudioexplorer has worked so far on everything except Pet Sounds which required me to use DVD AudioExtractor (presumably because it is a DVD not DVD-A?).Phil, Let me know what your results are.I've managed to rip various DVD-Audio disks - I'm only after the 24/96 stereo mixes. I hope there's something here that helps you. The file plays in Sound Forge, and sounds just as I expect it to. When I bring the file into (in my case) "Sound Forge Pro 10" the properties are described as "Audio sample rate: 192,000", "Audio bit depth: 24 bit", and "Audio channels: 2 (stereo)". My output file for the cut is 450,343,840 bytes as a ".wav" file. Then, finally, there's a pop-up for the completion of encoding and a description of the directory where the output should be residing. You should see the bars move across the page for "Processing" and "Writing". On the page that comes up I've selected: After encoding "Pop up a notify window" But put something meaningful immediately in front of %INDEX%. Next on the page is the individual file name box, and I don't even know anymore how it was first defined. Set "Output location" to something meaningful for you. Okay, at the top of the page that comes up (and assuming you want WAV output), "WAV - PCM Uncompressed Wave"īelow that are the setting details as you've outlined them above: In the right pane, select only "Chapter 01" and make sure all the other chapters are cleared. You should see in the lower left pane: "MLP (192kHz 24bit 2ch)" "Title1" works from the six channel source. In the top left pane, select only "Title2" - this gives you the stereo source version. Okay, from the top, once DVD Audio Extractor is first fired up and it's completed its initial disk scan. ![]() Now you may very well know much of the following, but I'm trying to be reasonably complete. The first cut was the only one I tried, and I'd recommend working one track at a time till you feel adventurous to try a batch extraction. I sucessfully extracted the first cut, "Hotel California", both as a six channel fold into two channels, and a strictly stereo extraction (since both versons are on the DVD-A). I've had that happen to me and it is rather frustrating.īut since I have both DVD Audio Extractor and the DVD-A of "Hotel California" I thought I'd take a crack at this. Click to expand.You might be repeatedly extracting some top level menu.
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