It makes sense now, thank you!shawnc22 wrote: ↑Thu Apr 30, 2020 11:24 amdarrrkmanxxx wrote: ↑Thu Apr 30, 2020 8:11 amGuys, can't we just take the .m2ts file from STREAM folder and do all with tsmusxer? If so, which version I should use?Please try to go back and read the first few pages of this thread. Going straight from the unecrypted m2ts file in tsmuxer will leave you with a ts file that still has the BL and EL+RPU layer in separate video tracks. This file can only be played on the x700 (and maybe oppo) to obtain dolby vision. Playing this file anywhere else (if it plays at all) will get you only HDR10. To get DV on other devices such as the Shield, the video tracks must combined first either using yusecope’s tool or the latest version of makemkv (the whole point of creating this thread). In a future version of tsmuxer, you may be able to skip this intermediate step as @jcdr is currently working on an implementation of the dual track to single track conversion into tsmuxer itself.
Pretty much just do exactly what you’re currently doing, except add in a step for extracting the audio and converting it to a format that your system is capable of handling. Try reading the first few pages of the other thread; it’s what people had to do previously with the mp4 method because of limitations in the mp4 container in handling truehd atmos tracks.rosavanwinkle wrote: ↑Thu Apr 30, 2020 8:35 amfor now i think i'm just going to try focus on just getting the dolby vision part of the atmos doesnt work,you got a guide for that too aka ac3?
Basically, the whole point is to eliminate as many steps as possible to make it easier for everyone.
When muxing with Tsmuxer from MKV, what profiles are we getting as a final DV output? My assumption is that MakeMKV combines two HEVC files into one track, but still dual-layer, correct? And then the profile is chosen by the build of Tsmuxer ( although I am not sure how it works with the Profile 5 since it's single track and single layer ).
Again, I appreciate the patience, @shawnc22