what's the best for conversion to stereo 2.0 sound:
192kbs Dolby 2.0 or
384kbs DD 5.1?
i know at least part of the time, the 2.0 channel is a special mix for 2.0 systems, but 192kbs seems a little .. low. is the sound on 5.1 mixes any better?
+ Reply to Thread
Results 1 to 14 of 14
-
-
Do a proper downmix with a tool like Azid and the 5.1 should be the better source.
-
uhm...no.....use the 2.0 if doing svcd/vcd. It *should* be downmixed already by the studio...who of course have much better equipment than we have. Also think about it.....192 2ch = 96kbps/channel.....384 5.1 = ~64/channel.....
-
Uhm..no...5.1 bitrate allocation isn't that simple, especially given that the LFE channel isn't really a full channel. But even then, a proper downmix will intelligently merge information from all of the channels into the two-channel stereo form, thus you get roughly 192Kbps per channel, which in a sense means you actually have more data than you need for 224Kbps stereo rather than less.
-
I would have to agree with wildcatfan on this one.
The 2.0 soundtrack would have already been downmixed from the 5.1 audio to Dolby Surround encoded audio by the studio and they would probably do it better than any non-Dolby authorised tool. Since you are aiming for a Dolby Surround encoded stereo file anyway, the 2.0 soundtrack is probably a better choice.
Regards.Michael Tam
w: Morsels of Evidence -
When doing what really amounts to double compression encoding (ac3->mp2), I would rather take my chances with a "non Dolby-authorised tool" and have more actual bits to work with, but I guess it's a matter of personal choice.
-
Ok but lets deal in reality on this particular issue....as Kinneera stated, a properly done downmix of the 5.1 channel is very much equal to the 2.0 downmix by the studio. And to my ears, on a very good soud system, I can not decipher the difference between the 2 (with 5.1 version via BeSweet/Azid/Lame).
-
Originally Posted by Kdiddy
-
as the studio (and director) know what sounds they want and where and sometimes change things substantially from their 5.1 mix to the 2.0 mix to get things to sound how they want them
if not why even bother with a 2.0 mix since the dvd player would downsample it anyway if you only had dolby surround. -
well, then what are we arguing about....if the difference is marginal why bother down mixing it yourself when you have a 2.0 stream (which is what you need) sitting right on the disc???
And also I don't know of any receivers that accept digital input and don't have a decoder built in, so I don't think that is necessarily the reason.
And DVD players DO output 5.1 streams through the rca outputs....they just downmix it themselves....that was my whole point (and part of the spec I believe is that a dvd player must be able downmix to dolby surround if it a) doesn't have onboard 5.1 processor b) processor is turned off) if the dvd player does the downmixing for you why bother with a 2.0 stream unless some changes are made in the mixing process? -
well, then what are we arguing about....if the difference is marginal why bother down mixing it yourself when you have a 2.0 stream (which is what you need) sitting right on the disc???
And also I don't know of any receivers that accept digital input and don't have a decoder built in, so I don't think that is necessarily the reason.
And DVD players DO output 5.1 streams through the rca outputs....they just downmix it themselves -
Hey man if you prefer it that way more power to you. I wasn't trying to convince you that you HAVE to use the 2.0 stream just that there isn't a NEED to. If you prefer the 5.1 downmixing yourself....then go for it
-
thanks for the replies..
i hear (or rather, read) that they **sometimes** put at least a little extra effort in a 2.0 studio downmix..
but i gather that the soundquality is basically the same for both 2.0 and 5.1, or undetectable enough for the unwashed masses such as myself..
thanks! -
Originally Posted by plonk
IMHO, as you are going to create a 2.0 encoded stereo file anyway, there is no reason to do an additional conversion step of downmixing 5.1 to 2.0 if the studio already provided a 2.0 downmix. There may not be a significant difference in quality, but I believe that it is reasonable to assume that the studio downmixed version (which would undoubtedly use a hardware Dolby encoder) would be either better of the same in quality. Thus, it would probably be wise to choose the 2.0 soundtrack when doing a rip when it is available.
Regards.Michael Tam
w: Morsels of Evidence
Similar Threads
-
192 vs 96 vs 48 vs 44.1 KHz?
By therock003 in forum AudioReplies: 22Last Post: 19th Nov 2012, 09:55 -
Achieve the best possible audio quality.
By Robertiebert in forum Video ConversionReplies: 8Last Post: 23rd May 2011, 09:35 -
improvising audio quality
By aruwin in forum AudioReplies: 1Last Post: 31st Jan 2011, 07:54 -
best audio video quality of youtube poor quality and not hq flv videos.
By nusratjaveid in forum Video ConversionReplies: 3Last Post: 20th Jun 2010, 19:23 -
Convert .ac3 (384 Kbps) to Dolby 5.1 (448 Kbps) ????
By christopheramos in forum AudioReplies: 6Last Post: 11th Jul 2007, 00:35