I did not mention with any word the new formats Atmos or dts-X. That is a very different Monkey: have you read the thread from beginning? I really try to give you guys an as clear as possible description of the bug, but I have the feeling that you do not really read what people are writing you.ġ. These high-end BD-players are meant to be connected via RCA to high end AMPs mostly with mono-block AMP's and separate PSU's per channel. Players in the same price range as media players never do this for you neither. Looking at Blu Ray disc players then some (very) expensive models with discrete 8 analog out RCA connectors can do this for you. Any trans-coding/re-encoding between these audio formats is not included and adding it is not to be expected as this must be supported by the chip-set in Hardware and involves licencing for processing the actual various DTS and DD formats. How is it meant to be read: If the source has DD, DTS or LPCM in multi-channel formats then it can decode it from the audio stream and pass it RAW as output via HDMI. Replaced my very nice and expensive Marantz for the same reason, yes it hurts to dispose these very nice AMP's from the past (better builds than most units today). LPCM always has far higher bandwidth requirements than DD and DTS native formats. Looked it up and it is HDMI 1.1 compliant only. The Denon 2807 AMP was a real nice product 10 years ago, but is heavily outdated today on digital aspects as good as it may still sound. So even if the player could put out MCH LPCM in high definition it will work only as stripped standard definition MCH LPCM (16-bit at 44/48 Mhz) which the 5.1 option does nicely for you (=SPDIF compliant). It will probably also lack the correct HDMI pass-through bandwidth for multi-channel high definition audio (minimal HDMI1.3, HDMI1.4 (+for 3D/ARC), HDMI2.0 (+for 4K.60p), HDMI2.1 (+for HDR dynamic). It is highly time for a new AMP if it does not include the desired DD and DTS decoders. Never had a media player that did this for me, but some AMP's (not even all) can do this. Obviously you want DTS-X and DD Atmos to be decoded too to LPCM? It is simply not meant to be read like that. Please confirm and provide us information about when you are going to fix this. Built in ZDMCĬonclusion: As it stands this feature is NOT working as advertised and must be fixed. Support HD audio(7.1ch) decode and passthrough Redesigns Native plattyer,Blu-ray better compatibility,Powerful subtitles ,Support MVC ISO,MVC MKV. Why? Just take a look specs of the 3 devices on your website:įor all three devices you state for "Audio Decode" the following: This is 100% clearly a BUG in the firmware of X8(tested) and X9s( tested) and most likely also X10( not tested)! It's really disappointing you did not manage to answer my above questions within more than 10 days :-( If no: Is this planned for any updates in the near future? If yes: What do I have to do in order to make it work? So my question is: Does the 9xs even support dts-MA decoding with 7.1-Multichannel-output (NO PASSTROUGH!) at all? But also with this setting I only hear 2.0.The only occasion where I get more than 2.0 is when I put the HDMI out to "RAW" and use the "Downmix to 5.1"-option, but this - as expected -only sends out the lossy 5.1 DTS-core as bitstream.
#Dts decoder external ps3
I need the 9xs to decode the audio stream and put it out as 7.1-LPCM-Multichannel over HDMI to my AVR, since it's an older Denon 2807, that cannot process lossloess formats, but can perfectly process 7.1-LPCM over HDMI (that's how I had hooked up my PS3 and HDDVD-Player for years-> they did the decoding and just passed it over to AVR via HDMI -> perfect 7.1 lossless sound for me )īut no matter what audio settings I use, I always get only 2.0 LPCM :-( Logically I would assume that "Multi Channel LPCM" is the correct HDMI-out setting in the Audio-settings of 9xs. I am pretty impressed so far, but one thing is really driving me crazy: I want to play Bluray-ISO-files (100% untouched) with DTS-MA -tracks, but cannot manage to set up the 9xs the way I need it.