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#9721 | |
Active Member
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Your sound bar can handle both Dolby and DTS codecs, so you should keep bitstream setting on for both, and personally I will turn off secondary audio as well. Think of Dolby and DTS codecs as zip files: they are lossless audio files, but compressed. When they’re decoded, they’re essentially being unzipped, and the end product would be a PCM file. Therefore, a PCM track is basically a lossless audio file in a generic/royalty-free uncompressed form. As a result, you don’t have to tell your player to bitstream that, your player will recognize the PCM file, and send it out the way it is. When you turn off the bitstream setting, you’re essentially telling your player to decode the audio files itself, and then send out the uncompressed PCM sound, but remember, most players will in this case interpret Dolby Atmos tracks as Dolby TrueHD tracks, so you will be losing the overhead channels. Bitstream simply means sending out compressed audio files as they are, and let the AV receiver/sound bar do the decoding. Last edited by VanHiscers; 12-31-2021 at 01:14 AM. |
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Thanks given by: | Jack Priest (12-31-2021) |
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#9722 |
Expert Member
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Oh, I think I've worked it out. Apparently my soundbar doesn't support LPCM (the track on the disc was saying LPCM, but he back cover of the blu-ray just said PCM, not sure what the difference is, but still)
I think I just need to update the firmware, then try it again and see what it sounds like |
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#9723 | |
Active Member
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There is a difference between LPCM and PCM, I can’t really explain it myself, but I’ve seen people often using them interchangeably. |
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Thanks given by: | Jack Priest (12-31-2021) |
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#9724 | |
Expert Member
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By the way, what exactly does turning off the "BD-Video Secondary Audio" setting do? |
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#9725 |
Active Member
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It’s asking you how you would like secondary audio, such as button-clicking sounds, to get delivered. If you want those sounds audible, then the player will actually encode those sounds into Dolby or DTS codecs, so they can be bit-streamed along the way, but why giving the player the extra duty, while potentially confusing the sound bar? I’d just turn it off.
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Thanks given by: | Jack Priest (01-04-2022) |
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#9726 | |
Active Member
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Last edited by jawhisna; 12-31-2021 at 05:45 AM. |
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#9727 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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Dang, well I guess I’ll double check that my player’s firmware is up to date, wipe the disc again, and make sure all HDMI are tightly connected. Did you exchange your discs directly with Universal?
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#9728 |
Blu-ray Knight
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I have this same problem with some discs on my Samsung Q80, mostly catalogue titles. I usually just end up dialing back the sharpness levels on the TV which usually improves or gets rid of the flickering. Shouldn't have to do that though.
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#9729 |
Blu-ray Emperor
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But is the sharpness set where it should be or is it being cranked up to what someone prefers? If the latter then you’ve just gotta live with it, piling on extra sharpening can cause a host of artefacts.
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#9730 | |
Blu-ray Knight
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It also helped when I switched the Clarity Mode Settings to Custom. This puts every presentation in Soap Opera mode but it goes away when I set Judder to 0. This minimizes flickering even more. It's just kind of a pain in the ass that I have to adjust the setting for pretty much each disc I play, but that's the wonderful world of 4k Last edited by PipesDonatello; 12-31-2021 at 04:14 PM. |
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#9733 |
Blu-ray Emperor
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Samsung love a bit of “pop” (ugh) at the expense of accuracy so it wouldn’t surprise me if the default is adding a load of sharpening, and 0-20 isn’t the most granular range of control at that. Yeah, all you can do is try it at 0. If it’s not to your taste then no harm done.
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#9735 |
Active Member
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Thanks, I’ll give lowering the sharpness down from 50 on my Sony A80J. My set is calibrated and I assume just lowering the sharpness some will have no affects on the overall picture, right?
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#9736 |
Blu-ray Emperor
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Ah. You has a Sony? In that case the default 50 *is* the 'zero sharpness' setting, in that it's neither adding or subtracting sharpness (but gives you the leeway to do both, if so desired). Lowering it from from 50 can create aliasing artefacts.
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#9737 |
Active Member
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Alright thanks, I’ll leave it be. Any other suggestions or ideas?
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#9739 |
Blu-ray Prince
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bingo!!
That was the one thing that I struggled with on the settings on my C1--- while I liked the extra contrast on a 4k or newer film--- everything else I played had a grain that resembled video noise and an unnatural white glow on people's faces. Black and white films in particular looked unappealing. I have dynamic contrast set to low versus medium or high. |
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#9740 |
Blu-ray Emperor
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Basically ALL of these contrast/brightness/sharpness/motion/colour enhancers should be switched off, no matter what make of TV people have. Well, that's if people want anything that's remotely accurate to what it should look like, if they want to adjust it to their taste then have at it, just don't expect everything to be free of these kinds of flickering or 'pumping' artefacts.
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Thanks given by: |
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Tags |
panasonic, ub820, ub9000, value electronics |
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