(2021-10-08, 11:00 AM)Turisu Wrote: Thanks so much for all of this information. I'm in the process of doing some Cinema DTS syncs at the moment and I'd like to make sure I'm setting the levels correctly. How certain is it that all post-1999 movies need an LFE boost of +6db?
If I apply a +6dB LFE boost to any of the LOTR movies then it results in clipping; +4dB is about as loud as it can go which incidentally puts LFE at the same level as the BD has it.
JPIII can be boosted +6dB without clipping but this makes the LFE +2dB louder than the DTS DVD track (all other channel levels of this track match the theatrical). Again +4dB would match the DVD.
I'm converting with the foobar2000 plugin v0.1.4. Also these movies were released in DTS-ES 6.1 with the additional channel matrixed into the surrounds. I don't know if this makes a difference. I'd be grateful for any insight.
I have not done a DTS-ES 6.1 yet, not sure if that affects things.
If not and for the others:
First when using foobar turn off it's auto LFE creation and all of it's +dB processing for any channel, let it do nothing at all. I seem to recall that you set it to do LFE and adjust dB of anything that the dB amounbt adjusted seems different numbers than when doing it manually so not sure what it is doing under the hood. And use the most recent version.
Take the Ls,Rs and combine the two tracks and then do a lowpass at 80Hz filter on them and then save that out as the LFE and then do a +3dB gain to it (already have a +3dB from combining the signal stored in both Ls AND Rs). For pre-1999 I think forget the +3dB stage. Smetimes you need to do the 80Hz lowpass filter first before combinging them as the upper frequency power might clip stuff, in those cases, 80Hz filter first, then combine the two channels, then +3dB if post start of 1999 release. Actually it's been a while, I forget, I think maybe in the end I did NO +3dB for the early 1999 title actually and decided it maybe just needed nothing done since they had recorded it in studio with LFE speaker already set to account for+3dB and then they stored it once in each channel and combining gives another +3dB. So maybe it is actually low pass, combine and then -3dB for pre-1999 and as is for 1999+? I forget, will check. I know that whatever I did, in audactity, my LFE looked about the same as what Schorman got for AOTC and all I did was either lowpass each and then combine Ls and Rs and then leave them be or at most then do a +3dB at that point and did no +6dB or +9dB and such for sure.
Then undo those actions on the Ls and Rs and then apply -3dB to each and then apply a high pass filter to them at 80Hz.
I was doing 48dB octave passes in Audacity although that seems to remove more stray high frquency from LFE than what the CinemaDTS box does looking at Schorman ouput so that box maybe does something more like 24dB per octave but it also seems to use a different filter method too so it won't be quite the same whatever way.
My software method in Audacity left a bit less instances of clipping than the Schroman DTS box output, neither had many clips at all, but the official box output had a few more. Or perhaps it came from when he resampled it from 44kHz to 48kHz? Not sure if resampling can produce clipping, have to think, maybe. I know applying low and high pass filters can since even though you are removing total energy you can realign some stuff to re-enforce and can phase shift some frequencies relative to others and they can add in new ways and they can also produce peak artifacts near cut frequency, etc. As even his center for one disc had the part that also clipped one mine (apparently clipping in the master!) clip just a bit more, maybe that was from his 44->48Hz resmapling stuff.
To best avoid clipping you may need to play around with the order of steps and balance clipping vs. maintaing max SNR:
For one title (using Audacity and whatever algorithms and methods it uses) reel 1:
I have to first -3dB before high-pass to create surrounds if I don't want any clipping in them.
I can straight add the two and then lowpass and make LFE with no clipping.
for reel 2:
I can just high-pass the surrounds first without clipping and then give them their -3dB.
I can straight add the two and then lowpass and make LFE with no clipping.
for reel 3:
I can just high-pass the surrounds first without clipping and then give them their -3dB. EDIT: nope can only do that for left surround, right surround need to first -3dB and then high-pass to avoid clipping.
I can't just straight add the two surrounds and then lowpass and make the LFE without it clipping. Even doing -3dB first to each surround and adding them still clips. I found I could first low-pass them and then add them as is without clipping though.
etc.
I wonder how the DTS processor does it. For safety does it just first -3dB the surrounds and then high-pass and then raise them back up again 3dB (remember the theater speakers have surrounds set -3dB) and then also add the two -3dB adjusted (EDIT: nope this is not enough to stop clipping for some of them when starting to make the LFE) together to make the LFE and then low pass that and then raise that back up again 3dB? Does it just apply all the stuff and the adding as they are and you end up with some clipping? In which case these manual methods with care may give more distortion free output than the theatrical processor. Maybe it does -3dB to each surround and then high-pass filters them to produce the surrounds. And then it goes back and looks at the original combo surround data and does a low pass filter on them and then adds them together.