![]() This is the problem for what you can search solutions than don't work for you. Seems than, with your sample, the Foobar2000 player can do the job, but I have DTS CD samples than can't be recognized with Foobar2000.Įven eac3to can recognize some dtswav but not all. If you play these files you can listen only noise, but there are players (or decoders) that can recognize the DTS stream inside this wav. For what "fake"?, because the wav header say that the content is PCM data 16 bits, 2 channels and 44100 samplerate (like was the audio of standard CD audio), and is not true, contain a special DTS track. If the CD is clean all soft produce the same wav files.Ģ) You obtain "fake" wav files, called dtswav. Even Foobar2000 can do the job, but one of the best is EAC because try to recover some read CD problems. Let me explain the problem.ġ) To rip the CD DTS to wav's (your first 3 pass) you can use many software. #DVD AUDIO EXTRACTOR CORE DTS INSTALL#How to rip DTS music CD's as isolated 5.1 audio filesĠ1) insert your DTS CD and open up iTunes to rip the tracksĠ2) under Import Settings, choose WAV encoder from the drop-down menuĠ3) make sure the Setting drop-down menu immediately underneath that says "Automatic" (not Custom)Ġ4) download the free program called Foobar2000 and also install the DTS Decoder from the Components page:Ġ5) it's and I'm using version 1.3.9 + decoder version 0.3.3Ġ6) take one of the wav files that iTunes ripped and drag it into the Foobar2000 windowĠ7) right-click on it, and choose Convert, then Quick-ConvertĠ8) select the "WAV" row (3rd from bottom?) and make sure the Output Bit Depth drop-down menu says "Auto" & Dither menu says "Never"Ġ9) click Convert, type out the file-name you want to call it & choose folder locationġ0) within a few seconds, it'll create a "wav" (?) type file - mine were quite large (100 MB+) and 4233 kbpsġ1) don't try to play these resulting files yet they'll either be sped up, glitchy, or just staticġ2) download the free program called Audacity (I'm using version 2.1.1) ġ3) install the program, open it, and drag one of your weird "wav" files into it - it should display itself as 6 separate waveforms, on 6 different rowsġ4) click File up at top-left, choose Export Multiple, and make sure the Export Format (first drop-down menu) says: WAV Microsoft signed 16-bit PCMġ5) click the Export button, and you'll probably have to click an Okay button 6 times after that as 6 windows come upġ6) Audacity will then extract the 6 individual audio channels (2 stereo 4 mono) from that big huge "wav" file, and put 'em all in that same folder! process don't work with all CD DTS. Instructions for "Digital Surround" channel extraction Anyway, here's how I finally did this I'll type it out step-by-step real simple in case any future users are Googling this same topic and stumble upon this thread: I should've came back to this thread last night and deleted it after I figured it all out, or at least marked it as "solved" but I was so tired by this point that it kinda fell by the wayside. Ghitulescu you're right, there were a bunch of programs I tried that were not a success (either didn't do this function exactly, or I couldn't even get them to open) and they were: TsMuxer, libdca, Tranzcode, EAC, dMpowerAmp, DVD Audio Extractor, and VLC. And ya know what, I actually did! SeeMoreDigital I hope you didn't go to a lot of trouble coming up with that solution - it looks brilliant and I'm sure it would've worked perfectly. Thanks you guys! After I posted that help message, I should've just gone to bed cuz it was so late, but I'm stubborn and really wanted to figure this out on my own. ![]()
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