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  1. I am backing up my new Bruce Almighty DVD and it has AC6English and DTS6English. Which one do I keep? thanks.
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  2. Member
    Join Date
    Sep 2003
    Location
    Pasadena, CA USA
    Search Comp PM
    in my limited DVD Shrink experience the DTS files are usually bigger, so if you want to sqeeze the last bit of quality keep the AC3. I tend to keep just the DTS for what I think is a bit better sound. But you can only play on a system with a DTS decoder in it.
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  3. Thanks for the quick reply, I will go with DTS since it compresses 93% vs. AC3 at 96%.
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  4. Member
    Join Date
    Sep 2003
    Location
    CANADA
    Search Comp PM
    DTS is fine if you have a sound system that can decode it. If not, you will have no sound. Many people do not have DTS capable systems; as such you won't be able to lend anyone your disc nor will you be able to copy to a video tape.

    I have a dts capable surround sound system, and I honestly prefer the standard Dolby Digital sound (AC3) over DTS.
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  5. myckee,
    You are right, No sound with just DTS. I just waiste a disk but learn a new thing.
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  6. I tend to choose the best quality audio track, and that would be DTS if available, but I don't compress it (although I didn't know there was an option to compress the audio) I compress the video instead. Even a 2 & 1/2 hour film compressed by 40% with the audio untouched, I couldn't tell the difference.

    Roll on, this is the best DVD archiver I've seen yet.

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  7. you don't compress audio in DVD shrink. I think he's refering to the overall compression ratio. and just so you know 96% is less compression than 93%. Its a little misleading the way its laid out. but the lower the compression percentage the more compression its doing.
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  8. Poppa_meth

    AC3 folder is around 300MB and DTS is around 600MB. If I select AC3 then the compression of the movie goes to 96% and 93% for just DTS and 84% for both sound folder check. So how come the 96% compression is less than 93%? Confuse....
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  9. because its not really a measurement of the compression but of the total disk space. when you are compressing everything its saying that the movie will be compressed to 84% of the original size to fit on one disk. when you knock out the DTS track its saying that the movie only needs to be compressed to 96% of its original size. its a measurement of how big the resulting files will be in comparison to the original files on the DVD.
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