A problem with DVD Audio Extractor

Please post here for issues related to Blu-ray discs
Post Reply
Message
Author
akse0435
Posts: 17
Joined: Thu Oct 29, 2020 6:40 pm

A problem with DVD Audio Extractor

#1 Post by akse0435 » Sat Jul 03, 2021 11:31 am

Hello,

I hope I'm posting this in the right place.

I've bought the program DVD Audio Extractor, and use it to extract audio from DVDs and Blu-Rays, after decrypting the files with Make MKV.

I have a few Blu-Ray discs with boath LPCM, DTS and DTS-HD-Ma audio streams, but everytme I try one of them with DVD Audio Extractor, the DTS-HD-Ma streams never show up.

For example, I have a Blu-Ray disc with the following audio streams:
LPCM Stereo 24 bit 192 KHz
DTS 5.1 24 bit 192 KHz
DTS 5.1 24 bit 96 KHz
DTS-HD 5.1 24 bit 192 KHz
DTS-HD 7.1 24 bit 96 KHz
But, only the first three streams show up, even though the website says, that the program supports DTS-HD-Ma streams.

What could be wrong, and what can I do to fix it?

Thanks in advance.

Kind regards:
Aksel Christoffersen

dcoke22
Posts: 3093
Joined: Wed Jul 22, 2020 11:25 pm

Re: A problem with DVD Audio Extractor

#2 Post by dcoke22 » Sun Jul 11, 2021 3:11 pm

This is not the right place to get help with DVD Audio Extractor.

However, what are you trying to do? The command line tool mkvextract, part of the MKVToolNix (https://mkvtoolnix.download) tools, can extract DTS-HD MA audio tracks. For example:

Code: Select all

user$ mkvmerge -i ./Die\ Hard.mkv 
File './Die Hard.mkv': container: Matroska
Track ID 0: video (MPEG-4p10/AVC/H.264)
Track ID 1: audio (DTS-HD Master Audio)
Track ID 2: audio (DTS)
Track ID 3: audio (AC-3)
Track ID 4: audio (AC-3)
Track ID 5: audio (AC-3)
Track ID 6: subtitles (HDMV PGS)
Track ID 7: subtitles (HDMV PGS)
Chapters: 56 entries

user$ mkvextract ./Die\ Hard.mkv tracks 1:diehardDTS.dts
Extracting track 1 with the CodecID 'A_DTS' to the file 'diehardDTS.dts'. Container format: Digital Theater System (DTS)
Progress: 100%

user$ mediainfo ./diehardDTS.dts 
General
Complete name                            : ./diehardDTS.dts
Format                                   : DTS XLL
Format/Info                              : Digital Theater Systems
Commercial name                          : DTS-HD Master Audio
File size                                : 2.11 GiB
Overall bit rate mode                    : Variable

Audio
Format                                   : DTS XLL
Format/Info                              : Digital Theater Systems
Commercial name                          : DTS-HD Master Audio
Bit rate mode                            : Variable
Channel(s)                               : 6 channels
Channel layout                           : C L R Ls Rs LFE
Sampling rate                            : 48.0 kHz
Frame rate                               : 93.750 FPS (512 SPF)
Bit depth                                : 24 bits
Compression mode                         : Lossless
I tested with a movie I have already ripped. I used mkvmerge to get the track IDs. Track 1 is the DTS-HD MA (48 kHz). I used mkvextract to extract that track into a file I named diehardDTS.dts. Then I used mediainfo on that file to show that it does contain DTS-HD MA audio.

dcoke22
Posts: 3093
Joined: Wed Jul 22, 2020 11:25 pm

Re: A problem with DVD Audio Extractor

#3 Post by dcoke22 » Sun Jul 11, 2021 3:23 pm

It could have something to do with the high sampling rate of your disc. I looked a little bit and it seems most of my discs are 48 kHz sampling rate. I didn't find one with a higher sampling rate.

akse0435
Posts: 17
Joined: Thu Oct 29, 2020 6:40 pm

Re: A problem with DVD Audio Extractor

#4 Post by akse0435 » Sun Jul 11, 2021 7:11 pm

Thank you for the replies, I think I'll try and ask somewhere else then.

The problem is not to extract the audio stream it self. DVD Audio Extractor is a progran, which can extract audio streams to multible files divided by chapters, and can extract to multible audio formats. It's meant to be used with DVD-Audio and Blu-Ray-Audio discs.
It could be the high sampling rate, but I'm not sure, since DVD-Audio and Blu-Ray-Audio often has samplin-rates 96 KHz and more.

Post Reply