2018-01-13, 18:36
Why isnt there an option to completely disable any kind of timestretching?
I use "sync playback to display" and i want 24p video to play with 25fps to match the 50fps rate of my tv.
The sound just has to be pitched up (this is the way 99% of pal dvds are produced)
So when can the user decide what he wants?
there are only 2 possibilities:
1. (What i want):
AC3, DTS, etc is decoded to 5.1 channels, then pitched up to match 25p and finally encoded by the "AC3 transcoder" to AC3, which is sent via spdif to my avr.
2. (I don't like time stretch artifacts)
AC3, DTS, etc is decoded to 5.1 channels, then time stretched (preserves pitch but adds time stretch artifacts) to match 25p and finally encoded by the "ac3 transcoder" to AC3, which is sent via spdif to my avr.
when i set system/audio to "best match" the audio engine goes completely crazy:
https://soundcloud.com/user-378662732/au...egoescrazy
it sounds like a broken turntable or tape deck.
windows, directshow with reclock has clear options to enable or disable it:
So please make it uncomplicated and easy in the future.
Thank you.
I use "sync playback to display" and i want 24p video to play with 25fps to match the 50fps rate of my tv.
The sound just has to be pitched up (this is the way 99% of pal dvds are produced)
So when can the user decide what he wants?
there are only 2 possibilities:
1. (What i want):
AC3, DTS, etc is decoded to 5.1 channels, then pitched up to match 25p and finally encoded by the "AC3 transcoder" to AC3, which is sent via spdif to my avr.
2. (I don't like time stretch artifacts)
AC3, DTS, etc is decoded to 5.1 channels, then time stretched (preserves pitch but adds time stretch artifacts) to match 25p and finally encoded by the "ac3 transcoder" to AC3, which is sent via spdif to my avr.
when i set system/audio to "best match" the audio engine goes completely crazy:
https://soundcloud.com/user-378662732/au...egoescrazy
it sounds like a broken turntable or tape deck.
windows, directshow with reclock has clear options to enable or disable it:
So please make it uncomplicated and easy in the future.
Thank you.