Dsp presets, Ac-3 encoding, Dolby digital – Meridian Audio 565 User Manual

Page 13: Digital dsp preset, Dolby digital dsp preset, Dolby digital encoding, Dts dsp preset, Dts encoding, Multi-channel digital formats, Multi-channel digital sources

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Introduction

9

DSP presets

The digital surround processor provides an extremely

comprehensive range of options for decoding both analogue

and digital audio signals and processing them for multi-channel

reproduction.

The digital surround processor provides several digital signal

processing options, called DSP presets, and these are designed

to provide the best results with a range of different types of

music and film material.

In addition to selecting built-in DSP presets, the digital surround

processor allows you to create your own presets based on the

standard ones. For example, you may want to add more delay to

the rear speakers to create a more spacious sound. You can

store your modified preset with a name of your choice, and

recall it for use at a later date.

This section gives information about each of the built-in DSP

presets, and gives recommendations for the best preset to

choose for different types of material.

Multi-channel digital sources

The 565 Digital Surround Processor supports the three

alternative multi-channel digital formats currently available,

which encode up to 8 different channels onto a digital signal:

Dolby Digital (AC-3), DTS, and MPEG Audio. It also supports

Meridian’s own MLP format.

Dolby Digital

Dolby Digital, previously called AC-3, is the preferred sound

format for DVD video and is widely used on LaserDisc

soundtracks. It is also the audio standard for US digital television.

DTS

DTS uses a carefully designed audio compression technique to

encode five channels of audio onto a digital signal. The DTS

format is used to encode multi-channel film soundtracks on

LaserDiscs and DVD video discs.

In addition, a high data-rate version of DTS can be used to

compress five channels of CD-quality audio into the same space

as two channels of unencoded sound, allowing a DTS music CD

to provide over an hour of five-channel music, at a quality

indistinguishable from conventional CD.

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