yes you can create a DV ISO from MKV using the latest tsmuxer but you'll have to process Atmos with eac3to first because tsmuxer wont accept ATmos without an AC3 core.built_to_chill wrote: ↑Mon Feb 24, 2020 2:48 pm
Hi there - I took a look at TSMuxer and it seems it can take various things (including mkv and i believe MP4) as input, and output an ISO. Just curious if you’re suggesting above this could be a route to getting Dolby vision and Dolby Atmos playback on the X700 when starting with an mkv?
Or whether this would require re-ripping everything to ISO using makemkv?
When a movie compress very well(CRF 14 or better) that's what i do. I re-encode the HDR10 layer to fit a BD-50 and then use tsmuxer to build a new iso with DV and Atmos and then i burn it.
I did that with a couple (about10) of movies and the x700 play my custom iso properly.
well it looks like they made it work. https://forum.doom9.org/showthread.php? ... ost1902124Grencola wrote: ↑Fri Feb 21, 2020 5:08 amunfortunately I highly doubt this will work. the secondary dolby vision track on uhd discs is an hevc layer, just like the main layer. when mp4muxer (or dvdfab) makes an mp4 it uses the dvhe (dolby vision high efficiency) codec. the dolby vision metadata is now hardcoded with the mp4 container, and not the actual file inside. the same goes with if dolby makes a ts file - the dvhe exists only within that container. as soon as you demux the contents, or remux into a different container, you completely lose all dolby vision information and are left with an hdr10 base file only. in order to remux a dv mp4 to ts (for atmos I assume) and retain dv, you would need to extract the el+rpu data using one of Dolby's officially licensed PSU workstations. you would then have to re-author a ts file using proprietary licensed dolby tools, like it does for their sample videos. none of this is currently possible with 3rd-party hardware and software.


