The Silent Way dts.wav files are 48kHz/16 bit -- so that is what you need to set your MIDI output to.
Don't 'convert' the files to anything except .wav (which only means, 'decode the flac' aka decompress them). The resulting dts.wav files should remain 48kHz/16bit.
On 01/04/13 13:39, floyd fisher wrote:
am about as confused as i was BEFORE i read this LOL. am good with all the other files i've found; they're all dvd audio files (audio ts and video ts), so i can open them in apple's dvd player. and the audio midi settings easily switch to 8ch 24bit. the ONLY thing i can't work out is these flac files. i've converted in toast, then converted the toast file to audio/video ts...and...static.will re-read your post once (IF) my brain clears...
On Friday, January 4, 2013 1:20:37 PM UTC-5, Blee...@yahoo.com wrote:Steven is right in that it is just a matter of bitstreaming from the mac. Unfortunately unlike windows Macs don't change the sample and word lengths automatically. So unless you have it set to the correct parameters for the particular track (using iTunes as an example) set in the audio/midi settings you will get nada but static. My suggestion is to either use bootcamp to run something like JRiver or Foobar as they will output both DTS flacs and wavs. Again there are a couple programs on the mac that will do all this automatically. A suggestion would be to post to say Computeraudiophile.com and they usually are up on what works. I've personally accomplished it before but it is a big old bag of hurt most of the time. For example, my MBP will sometimes boot 2 channel (and no amount of mucking with Audio Midi will change that) and I have to remove the preference file in order for it to recognize all of the 8 channels it supports. Thus if I were to try to play a DTS file with that particular bug active, nothing I do to the mac will allow me to play that file. If I reboot and the Audio Midi reveals all 8 channels present and active then I can play MC files with certain 3rd party players. You will NOT accomplish this in iTunes no matter what you do. All this convinced me MC music on a mac is just too hard to be reliable. I personally get around this by using Playback Media Server and iSedora (both work bitperfect on Mac) and a suitable UPNP/DLNA renderer that does MC (Oppo being one example, but there are probably lots of little media boxes that would handle this duty, or you could use another PC to stream to). I also get better sound streaming than a direct bitstream from the Mac, though several 3rd party players do memory play so depending on your equipment memory play may trump streaming. Bitstreaming from the mac isn't so easy however. XBMC is probably the simplest way I know of doing it on a mac but it is NOT an audiophile music player. It will however bitstream from a mac when connected to the right equipment and you needn't muck around in audio midi settings unless you are only registering 2 channels on your mac. (Mine is a handshaking issue related to having 3 different monitors hooked to a MBP. YMMV and you may not have a problem with your mac staying on 8 channels, this is particular to my set up although some MBP's do default to 2 channel whenever a preference file is corrupted or what have you. Hope I didn't confuse you even more.
On Thu, Jan 3, 2013 at 8:37 PM, Steven Sullivan <ssu...@panix.com> wrote:
AC3 , not AAC
On 01/03/13 23:24, Steven Sullivan wrote:
Flac is merely a lossless compressed version, useful for tagging. If your software can't play the flac file directly (as e.g. foobar2000 can on PCs), decompress them to their original form: in this case, dts.wav.
For streaming, as with any dts, aac file, your signal chain must not alter the bitstream in any way. That means the playback volume must be at max, and there must be no sample rate conversions or DSP active.
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