VideoHelp Forum




+ Reply to Thread
Results 1 to 13 of 13
  1. Member
    Join Date
    Feb 2002
    Location
    Toronto, Ontario, Canada
    Search Comp PM
    How can I rip only the audio track from a DVD into a WAV file?
    Quote Quote  
  2. Member wulf109's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2002
    Location
    United States
    Search Comp PM
    DVD Decrypter
    IFO mode
    Rip by chapter
    Stream rip
    set to demux the audio stream you want
    If no PCM/WAV stream,convert ac3 to wav with Heahac3he
    Quote Quote  
  3. VH Veteran jimmalenko's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2003
    Location
    Down under
    Search PM
    Or use DVD2AVI and have Doly Digital set to Decode. This will convert the AC3 to WAV for you in the same step.
    If in doubt, Google it.
    Quote Quote  
  4. Member dcsos's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2003
    Location
    Y No Werk (anagram)
    Search Comp PM
    If you're too lazy to follow any of the guides or have a reason to automate the process, DVD2ONE has announced a new product that does this.

    It delivers a DVD that contains AUDIO ONLY that plays 16bit on all DVD players (not a DVD AUDIO 24bit type )

    www.dvd2one.com
    DVD+Audio Creator is what its called
    Quote Quote  
  5. Member
    Join Date
    Jul 2003
    Location
    United States
    Search Comp PM
    Wulf109, can you elaborate on your explanation for me? I followed what you wrote and used DVD-Decrypter on a DVD that had PCM. I ended up with a VOB that contains audio only (I guess that is good). How do I convert that VOB to MP3?

    Also, I did look for a guide to follow and found one here, but its link hasn't been working for a few days so I can't use it.

    Thanks for any help.
    Quote Quote  
  6. Member
    Join Date
    Oct 2003
    Location
    The hills of Kentucky
    Search Comp PM
    you could rip the whole dvd to your hard drive with smart ripper then use TMPGEnc plus to split to seperate audio and video streams then use a program like goldwav or ffmpegGUI to convert to .wav format just remember to go from 48 to 44 on your audio encoding if your going to be playing your .wav files in a standard CD player.
    Quote Quote  
  7. If you're too lazy to follow any of the guides or have a reason to automate the process, DVD2ONE has announced a new product that does this.

    It delivers a DVD that contains AUDIO ONLY that plays 16bit on all DVD players (not a DVD AUDIO 24bit type )

    www.dvd2one.com
    DVD+Audio Creator is what its called
    that's not what the poster was interested in. this prog DOES NOT rip. it is a dvd audio disc creator. it takes wav files and encodes it to dvd audio specs if you wish. but it's not a ripper.
    BTW i am kind of suspicious of the prog. claims the dvd audio disc it creates is much higher quality (when set to the highest setting) than the original CD from where the wav files originated. kinda like CREATING ENERGY.
    Quote Quote  
  8. Originally Posted by goldenhawkofky
    you could rip the whole dvd to your hard drive with smart ripper then use TMPGEnc plus to split to seperate audio and video streams then use a program like goldwav or ffmpegGUI to convert to .wav format just remember to go from 48 to 44 on your audio encoding if your going to be playing your .wav files in a standard CD player.
    Interestingly I did this recently but only wanted one song off the DVD. I used DVD2AVI to work out which vob file it was one and ripped that one, creating the wav file from the Dolby Digital Decode option. I then opened the wave file with Adobe Audition, found the song I wanted and moved that segment to a new track and then output it as a WMA file for my portable player

    Larry
    Quote Quote  
  9. I used DVD Audio Extractor
    https://www.videohelp.com/tools?tool=547#comments

    I was able to leave the orignal DVD in the drive and select the individual track(s) I wanted. Has MANY option sof what kind of audio file you want to make from it.

    Hope that helps

    Plus, it was VERY fast. A 60 minute DVD was converted in 8 mintues with all the tracks becoming individual files, which you can option to do or not.
    Quote Quote  
  10. Member dcsos's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2003
    Location
    Y No Werk (anagram)
    Search Comp PM
    thanks.Noki...my error
    Quote Quote  
  11. Member
    Join Date
    Feb 2004
    Location
    Florida
    Search Comp PM
    Hello again guys. I serach the forums and found this recent thread, so I'd figure I'd ask my questions in here to get some faster responses. Here's what I want to do:

    I want to basically compile a CD audio collection of my favorite Quotes, Lines, Sounds from my personal DVD collection into MP3's or WAVs (doesn't really matter to me, whichever is easier) and burn them onto a disc. WAVs would be better so I can listen to the CD in a regular CD player (non-MP3 player), but I know that MP3s would save space. I know that I can probably convert either or into either format - not a big deal. I am just curious on how I would be able to do this??? I don't want a whole chapter of audio, JUST a quote or a COUPLE of lines. So what would be the BEST program(s) to use for this??? I already have an audio editor/mixter (Acustica - I think is what it is called), but what would be the best process for doing something like this with almost 200 DVDs???

    I was looking at DVD Audio Extractor V1.1.6. This seems to do the job as far as ripping the audio tracks by Chapters. I am guessing that I would just find the chapter(s) that had the quote(s) or lines that I wanted and then just rip those audio tracks. Looking at the program, it seems that it would let you then convert/encode the ripped audio Chapter into a WAV or MP3. Finally, I am guessing that I would use my Audio Editing program to open up that saved WAV/MP3 audio chapter and then find the quote/lines that I wanted and cut/delete the stuff I didn't want to finally save it as an MP3 or WAV. It seems like it would take a long time, but there doesn't seem to be any easier or faster ways of doing this.

    It would be appriciated if anyone could comment on this or add any kind of info or help on this... Thanks.

    Dallas22
    Quote Quote  



Similar Threads

Visit our sponsor! Try DVDFab and backup Blu-rays!