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Gear / Technical Help => Ask The Tapers => Topic started by: phishn on December 27, 2003, 10:18:39 PM
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Playing around with DVD burner..anyone know how to make an audio DVD disk using wav files that are beyond cd quality ( such as 16/48 and 24/96)? Playing around with nero 6 and cant figure it out.
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Playing around with DVD burner..anyone know how to make an audio DVD disk using wav files that are beyond cd quality ( such as 16/48 and 24/96)? Playing around with nero 6 and cant figure it out.
they have to be compressed, try them in flac and it should work!!!
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Playing around with DVD burner..anyone know how to make an audio DVD disk using wav files that are beyond cd quality ( such as 16/48 and 24/96)? Playing around with nero 6 and cant figure it out.
they have to be compressed, try them in flac and it should work!!!
but then it's just data, not audio?
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Playing around with DVD burner..anyone know how to make an audio DVD disk using wav files that are beyond cd quality ( such as 16/48 and 24/96)? Playing around with nero 6 and cant figure it out.
they have to be compressed, try them in flac and it should work!!!
but then it's just data, not audio?
i know, but it wont play anything back unless its 16/44.1k correct???so, if this is the case, then id compress them anyway!! ;)if not, dont listen to me
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and schwilly, all it is is 1's and 0's anyway, which is data!! ;D
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binary is so limiting!
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i believe dvd audio quality is 16/48 and higher..and DVD audio should play back at these higher rates..this is what my motive is..to have audio DVD's that I can play in my high end system.
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You can burn DVD-A discs with the 48/16 audio tracks: not FLACed or SHNed. You need DVD authoring software to do it. http://www.discwelder.com/
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You can burn DVD-A discs with the 48/16 audio tracks: not FLACed or SHNed. You need DVD authoring software to do it. http://www.discwelder.com/
nice!!the steel version looks quite tempting!!! 8)
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Right after I posted that I talked to a friend who thinks that it is possible to use the DVD format with a 48/16 audio track and a still image for the video. That would allow you to burn a "video" DVD that would play on standard players. Alot of DVD players don't support DVDA but could play a standard DVDV disk with soundtrack. Maybe someone else on the board has done this and could comment. That sure would be better than paying $500 for software.
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Right after I posted that I talked to a friend who thinks that it is possible to use the DVD format with a 48/16 audio track and a still image for the video. That would allow you to burn a "video" DVD that would play on standard players. Alot of DVD players don't support DVDA but could play a standard DVDV disk with soundtrack. Maybe someone else on the board has done this and could comment. That sure would be better than paying $500 for software.
your correct on this point, burn a video dvd with an image or no image and it will play on your standard dvd player, but you do need discwelder and i think its the only authoring software out there right now i believe to do dvd audio, hope this helps
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yeah someone suggested this alternate method on a thread not too long ago. they said to use sonicfoundry's dvd-architect. i downloaded the program but haven't found the time to try it out yet. im curious if this alternate method will allow you to burn 24/48 or only 16/48.
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think i may have found a workaround solution. convert wav to avi..then run an avi to dvd converter. this link explains how to convert avi to dvd..burn, etc. http://www.avi-vcd.com/avi-to-dvd.asp
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^^ in this case..its converting a video type dvd with just the sound.
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Isn't .avi a compressed format? Won't that compress the audio as well as the "video?"
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think i may have found a workaround solution.
Oh great. Now I guess I don't have any more excuses.
Is the Pioneer A106 the current favorite?
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avi doesnt seem to compress the audio. just save your wav file from soundforge or whatever as avi. Its saved at 16/48 in the avi.
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DVD-Video supports any combination of 16,20, 24 bit and 48, 96 sampling rates.
DVD-A can support 16,20, and 24-bit and 44.1, 48, 88.2, 96, 176.4 and 192 kHz sampling rates.
Disc Welder is only necessary for creating DVD-A discs. It is not necessary for creating DVD Video discs with audio and a still shot . You should be able to create these discs with any DVD Video software as long as it supports the desired bit and sampling rates. 16/48 shouldn't be a problem, higher rates will depend on the software.
*Note
I have not tried this yet but I will as soon as the DVD burner arrives this week ;D )
Joe
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This one works well, even though you can only go up to 16/48 with tmpg.
http://www.dvdrhelp.com/forum/userguides/193049.php (http://www.dvdrhelp.com/forum/userguides/193049.php)