Questions & Answers:
Surround Sound Formats...
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| Surround Sound Formats |
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| Surround Sound Formats |
| There are many different sound formats; you are probably familiar with three of them as they are displayed as the final credits roll on the end of a film. These are: |
| Dolby: (Dolby Pro Logic, Dolby Pro Logic II, Dolby Pro Logic II x, Dolby Digital, Dolby Digital EX)
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| DTS (Digital Theater Systems):(DTS ES, DTS ES Discrete, DTS Neo:6)
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| SDDS: (Sony Dynamic Digital Sound) |
| And all this means? |
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| What is Dolby Pro Logic? |
| Dolby Pro Logic is a matrix decoder that decodes the four channels of surround sound that have been encoded onto the stereo soundtracks of Dolby Surround program material such as VHS movies and TV shows. Dolby Surround is a matrix encoding process that in essence “folds” Left, Centre, Right, and Surround channels onto stereo soundtracks. A Pro Logic decoder “unfolds” the four channels on playback (without a Pro Logic decoder, the encoded program plays in regular stereo). |
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| What is Dolby Pro Logic II? |
| Dolby Pro Logic II is an advanced matrix decoder that derives five-channel surround (Left, Centre, Right, Left Surround, and Right Surround) from any stereo program material, whether or not it has been specifically Dolby Surround encoded. On encoded material such as movie soundtracks, the sound is more like Dolby Digital 5.1 (see below), while on un-encoded stereo material such as music CDs the effect is a wider, more involving sound field. Among other improvements over Pro Logic, Pro Logic II provides two full-range surround channels, as opposed to Pro Logic’s single, limited-bandwidth surround channel. |
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| What is Dolby Pro Logic IIx? |
| As per Pro Logic II but IIx is an even more advanced matrix decoder that derives seven-channel surround (Left, Centre, Right, Left Surround, Right Surround, Left Back & Right Back) from any stereo program material. This has only just hit the market place but is proving popular with 6.1 & 7.1 set-ups using stereo material e.g. music on CD. |
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| What is Dolby Digital 5.1? |
| Dolby Digital 5.1 is a method of transmitting and storing 5.1-channel soundtracks via newer digital media such as DVD, digital cable, digital broadcast TV (DTV), and satellite transmissions. Unlike the Dolby Surround encode/Pro Logic decode process, which sacrifices channel separation to get surround onto any stereo soundtrack, Dolby Digital 5.1 is a discrete system that keeps the multiple channels fully separated throughout the encoding and decoding processes. In addition to having full-range Left, Centre, Right, Left Surround, and Right Surround channels, Dolby Digital 5.1 soundtracks carry a sixth (“.1”) channel recorded with low-frequency effects (those bass rumbles and booms you feel as well as hear in a well-equipped cinema). |
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| What is Dolby Digital EX? |
| Dolby Digital EX For soundtracks, such as those on movies and DVDs, 5.1 means that the soundtracks are recorded with five main channels: left, centre, right, left surround, and right surround, plus a low-frequency effects (LFE) bass channel (called a ".1" channel because it covers only a fraction of the frequency range of the main channels).
Some movie soundtracks use a variation on 5.1 called Dolby® Digital Surround EX™, which has now migrated via DVDs to home theatre. This format matrix encodes a third surround channel onto the left and right surround channels of 5.1 soundtracks, and may be decoded or not at the cinema’s or home listener’s option due to their inherent compatibility. Because the extra surround information is carried on the left and right surround channels, Dolby Digital Surround EX encoded soundtracks are still regarded as 5.1 soundtracks.
With respect to home playback, the terms 5.1, 6.1, and 7.1 mean that there are five, six, or seven main speakers, plus a subwoofer, in the playback system. (The subwoofer reproduces the LFE channel recorded on 5.1 soundtracks, plus any bass the main speakers cannot handle.) The difference is in the number of surround speakers: two in a 5.1 system, three in a 6.1 system, and four in a 7.1 system.
Obviously, a 5.1-channel soundtrack can be played on a 5.1-speaker system. But it is not always understood that it can also be played on a 6.1- or a 7.1-speaker system. To do this, the two surround signals on the 5.1 soundtrack are spread across the three or four surround speakers. This distribution can be accomplished by a Dolby Digital EX decoder, a THX Surround EX decoder, or other proprietary methods provided in home theatre equipment by various manufacturers.
So the number (i.e., 5.1) describing the soundtrack does not have to match the number applied to the speaker system. It’s even possible to play two-channel stereo content over these multi-speaker systems by using a matrix surround decoder such as Dolby Pro Logic® II. The delivery format and the speaker configuration are independent, and it is the decoder's job to bridge them effectively. |
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| What is DTS(Digital Theater Systems) Digital Surround? |
| DTS Digital Surround is the main competitor for providing 5.1 channels of discrete digital audio in consumer electronics products and software content. Less digital compression is applied to put across the sound from the original mastering to your home cinema system. A DTS soundtrack is recorded on a disc and therefore takes full advantage of digital storage technology advancements by putting data on the medium invented to store it: CD-ROM. Playing the correct sound for each frame of film projected, the DTS system reads timecode on the film and synchronizes playback from the CD-ROM discs. DTS' audio integrity is unaffected by film deterioration or degradation — the print plays perfect sound whether on the first play date or the thousandth. Initially the NTSC (Region 1) discs supported this format, however more Region 2 discs (PAL) are becoming available, in increasing amounts. |
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| What is DTS(Digital Theater Systems) DTS-ES? |
| DTS-ES is the only digital audio format capable of delivering 6.1 channels of discrete audio in the consumer electronics market. DTS-ES is also fully backwards compatible with DTS decoders that are not Extended Surround equipped. |
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| What is DTS(Digital Theater Systems) Neo:6? |
| DTS Neo:6 provides up to six channels of matrix decoding from stereo matrix material. |
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| What is DTS(Digital Theater Systems) 96/24? |
| DTS 96/24 offers a very high level of audio quality for multi-channel sound on DVD-Video, and is fully backward compatible with all DTS decoders. "96" refers to a 96kHz sampling rate (compared to typical 48kHz sampling rate.) "24" refers to 24-bit word length. |
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| What is SDDS (Sony Dynamic Digital Sound)? |
| SDDS is a digital film sound format comprised of the SDDS soundtrack, optically printed on both edges of 35mm film, and SDDS playback hardware. Sony designed SDDS exclusively for motion picture theatres, so there is no consumer equivalent. SDDS is the only motion picture sound format to offer up to 8 channels of discrete digital sound. |
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| What is Lucasfilm THX? |
| Lucasfilm THX is not a surround format, the decoding is still done by Dolby Digital or DTS. What Lucasfilm do is set stringent performance standards for cinemas to enhance the film experience e.g. auditorium noise, audio distortion. To display the THX logo, cinemas must adopt the standards set and then get certification by Lucasfilm’s THX division. These performance parameters can also be applied to domestic technologies used for Home Cinema e.g. DVD players, Amplifiers/Receivers, Processors, Speakers. The two domestic standards are THX Ultra and now THX Ultra (2) for ‘high end’ equipment and THX Select for ‘midrange’ products. The aim being to make them sound more like the film would in a Movie Theatre |
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