2017-03-15, 07:14 PM
Found disclord's old posting:
"I have the AC-3 LaserDisc of True Lies plus the DTS LaserDisc and the Pan-Scan AC-3 LaserDisc - I also have the R1 DVD.
In terms of picture quality, the DTS is the clear winner - it has less edge enhancement and the Kuraray mastering and pressing is sharper and has less noise than either two of Pioneer's AC-3 pressings. An engineer at Fox told me, back when the DVD was released, that they used the same D1 master tape, that had extra edge enhancement, to make both the AC-3 LaserDisc and the DVD release. However, the sound on the DVD used the same 18-bit DA88 master tape that was used to make the DTS LaserDisc release. The AC-3 LD's used a 16-bit master that had been slightly remixed for home use whereas the 18-bit master used for the DTS LD and AC-3 DVD was an exact duplicate (bit-for-bit clone) of the theatrical mix used to make the 70mm prints and DTS/Dolby Digital 35mm prints.
Its a shame that True Lies is only available in HD on D-Theater because this film needs a state-of-the-art HD transfer and release on BD - even for the time its LaserDisc and DVD transfer was not that good. But the sound of the DTS LD is truly amazing - it's another film where the sound mixers recorded real multichannel backgrounds and such to greatly increase the realism of the audio."
I've only heard the ac3 LD. I forgot what disclord said about the DVD being untouched and the ac3 LD being remixed slightly, so I guess I'll have to compare at some point.
"I have the AC-3 LaserDisc of True Lies plus the DTS LaserDisc and the Pan-Scan AC-3 LaserDisc - I also have the R1 DVD.
In terms of picture quality, the DTS is the clear winner - it has less edge enhancement and the Kuraray mastering and pressing is sharper and has less noise than either two of Pioneer's AC-3 pressings. An engineer at Fox told me, back when the DVD was released, that they used the same D1 master tape, that had extra edge enhancement, to make both the AC-3 LaserDisc and the DVD release. However, the sound on the DVD used the same 18-bit DA88 master tape that was used to make the DTS LaserDisc release. The AC-3 LD's used a 16-bit master that had been slightly remixed for home use whereas the 18-bit master used for the DTS LD and AC-3 DVD was an exact duplicate (bit-for-bit clone) of the theatrical mix used to make the 70mm prints and DTS/Dolby Digital 35mm prints.
Its a shame that True Lies is only available in HD on D-Theater because this film needs a state-of-the-art HD transfer and release on BD - even for the time its LaserDisc and DVD transfer was not that good. But the sound of the DTS LD is truly amazing - it's another film where the sound mixers recorded real multichannel backgrounds and such to greatly increase the realism of the audio."
I've only heard the ac3 LD. I forgot what disclord said about the DVD being untouched and the ac3 LD being remixed slightly, so I guess I'll have to compare at some point.
Damn Fool Idealistic Crusader