

Its not comparable to any audio codec you dealt with before. Software can't just "decode" Atmos or DTS:X, that's not how it works. "Decoding" of the latest and the greatest object-oriented formats such as Dolby Atmos and DTS:X is still a problem for software. It was already integrated to all well-known software such as multiplatform open source home theater Kodi (aka XBMC) and MPC-HC (via Lav Audio). And the most important is that open source DTS-HD Master Audio decoder appeared recently and actively developed now. There weren't issues detected with playing back TrueHD audio by variety of software players. Luckily there are solutions offering audio quality without compromise. If somehow your AVR doesn’t have support of DTS-HD MA or Dolby TrueHD yet or you don’t have AVR, but still want to listen to HD-audio - you can go software way as alternative. But if you do and don't plan bitstreaming, you can go ahead and compress LPCM audio to FLAC for space saving fearlessly. I doubt you have lots of movies containing uncompressed LPCM. Somedays If you decide to upgrade AVR and try bitstreaming, perhaps you will find how easy and great bitstreaming is and will be thankful that you ripped all Blu-rays with compressed HD-audio unchanged. This assures the best quality and the best future-proof. So I highly recommend keeping DTS-HD MA and TrueHD audio streams intact. So adding a step to the process which possibly may cause a situation where your PC can alter the original audio because of proprietary codecs with closed standards is a nightmare. Open source decoders are really great effort, but they are reverse engineered.

There is no “official” TrueHD or DTS-HD MA decoder or a specification.

So you should ask yourself twice: “Am I absolutely sure to be married with FLAC permanently and make unreversible changes?”Īnd the last reason is the most scaring one. The second reason is that both codecs are proprietary. The main reason is that both of the codecs are already efficiently compressed.īut this is not the only reason, I wouldn’t recommend to recompress DTS-HD MA and TrueHD to FLAC. For each 1,000 gigabytes of compressing DTS-HD MA / TrueHD / LPCM to FLAC you will save 20 / 10 / 100 gigs accordingly.įor the most popular Blu-ray HD-audio formats like DTS-HD Master Audio and Dolby TrueHD the difference is almost none and equals only 2% or 1%. J– hi this is DTS-HD Master Audio Suite 2.60.22 Full.Conclusion of Converting DTS-HD MA, TrueHD, LPCM to FLAC Dts-hd Master Audio Suite Encoder Torrent
