DoomBot said:
Jetrell Fo said:
DoomBot said:
I sure hope there's someone that can do this, i have sound forge but i only know somethings. I take it the DTS is for 24.000fps and would have to be adjusted to 23.976fps? As well as other changes to it i'm sure.
This is what I know .....
Each reel is encoded with a specific reel number. Each includes all of the leader and tail out stuff. If you actually look at a piece of film and decode the DTS timecode, the first frame count is something like 300- which is 10 seconds (DTS uses 30 fps). The player actually syncs to the frame number printed on the film in the timecode. The timecode includes reel number, frame number (for that reel) and the feature serial number.
Also, the audio is separated in to reels so each (6 or 7 depending) have to get edited back together properly.
It would be interesting to have one of these audio files to mess around with just to see whats it's all about. How big is 1 reel after you decode it?
Reel 1 of The Matrix decoded, 16m 52s long, 6 channel 5.1 Stereo WAV, 510.61MB ....
FremenDar007 said:
Jetrell Fo said:
FremenDar007 said:
I could rent The Matrix Blu-ray and rip the main video file and then re-time it. It still has the re-timing to match Reloaded and Revolutions, correct?
No, it won't be for DVD, unless if I make a BD9. Yes for BD25 since it's cheapest. Still VC-1, no MPEG2 shit downconversion. Yes for the lossless audio and subtitles.
If you don't have a Blu-ray disc player, PS3, or even a BD-ROM or burner drive, then tough shit.
Nothing will be changed to the video concerning film grain, just retiming the color. Should be easy.
Well, if this could be done fairly simply all that would need to be done is have the DTS audio properly put back together and have it synch with the video. Do we have anyone here that is so good at audio editing and synch that they don't need to timeshift to synch?
What about the Dolby TrueHD track from the Blu-ray disc or is that not up to par? I bet it's another one of those -4db tracks too...
Might as well use my Blu-ray disc burner for a worthwhile project. All I'd need to do is have the same color timimg throughout the entire film to match the original DVD/cinematic release? Could compress it to fit on a BD25 with room to spare for a high bitrate DTS track.
Especially because Blu-ray has far better color timing and detail compared to even LD, DVD and HD DVD. If the bitrate is better and film grain kept it compared to HD DVD.
As I've mentioned, I'd never make any DVD versions of anything. AVCHD/BD9 or BD25 for this.
Would it have to be compressed or is the Bluray a BD50?