![]() Yep, it probably IS decoding & downconverting to Dolby Prologic. No, you can't upsample without Demuxing the DTS from the WAV, decoding it to uncompressed 5.1, resampling 48kHz, re-encoding to DTS and re-encapsulating it in WAV. If there is a mismatch between what the file is, where it's coming from and what the player/receiver is expecting, maybe that's the cause of the light not lighting.īut like I said, if you're getting music out of it, don't worry too much about it.ġ. ![]() ![]() DTS-WAV is intended to be authored & burned to AudioCDs and so is expected to be 44.1kHz. Tell me, are those WAV files set at 44.1kHz or 48kHz? It could be that it expects only one kind. Sounds like your receiver just doesn't interpret those files as correctly as it should.īUT, if you are hearing SOUND, as opposed to NOISE, your receiver is receiving it correctly and decoding it. ![]() So while the original bitrate of the DTS would usually be 754 kbps, it is padded out to the 1378 kbps expected of that CD standard WAV. ![]() What is happening is that the original DTS compressed signal is packetized & padded to match the standard bitrate of a Stereo LPCM 16/44 WAV file, such as what would be used on a CD. I'm guessing you are talking about the kind of DTS signal that is encapsulated within a WAV file format (similar to DD-WAV). ![]()
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