The list below focuses on true 5.1 encoders. Before purchasing, make sure you're getting 5.1. I did not want surround encoding, I wanted true multi-channel. Word of caution #1: Almost all DVD burning packages produce AC3 (Dolby Digital) TWO channel output, consumer & sometimes professional formats. It would be nice to keep a running tally, so newbies like you & me can pick the right price/function point for our budget & needs. I've searched this forum & others & a bunch of websites, and I think I have compiled a pretty good list of options here. I am also tryng to find a good multichannel solution. Which you can then put in most any DVD player and not have to worry about compatibility issues.as long as you burn it on a DVD-R disc. It will encode your seperate wave files to Dolby Digital AC3 and then burn it to a DVD movie format for you. If it sounds confusing.well it is, it's a mess when you get into the technical details of DVDs. DTS is also put on movie discs, you'll have to make sure your DVD player supports DTS format playback decoding. Dolby Digital (AC3) is the most popular format, this is the format usually put on DVD movie discs. MLP is the "DVD Audio" format.you probably won't need to be concerned with that, since you'll need a special DVD player that specifically says it can playback a "DVD AUDIO" format. There are 3 different audio formats that can be put on DVD for surround. Then once you get the file in that format then you need to burn it to a DVD video format. The first thing you'll need to do is convert the seperate wave files into a Dolby AC3 format file. Nero 7: īasically you're looking for two things to make this happen. See product comparison sheet for more details between Nero 6 vs. I believe you'll need Nero7 for doing multichannel surround.
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