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Topic: SR.D HD
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Bobby Henderson
"Ask me about Trajan."
Posts: 10973
From: Lawton, OK, USA
Registered: Apr 2001
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posted 02-24-2007 02:15 PM
The "HD" thing is probably just a bunch of bullcrap, just like the "HD" term in "HD Digital Radio."
There would have to be some significant physical change in the data bitmap Dolby Digital has printed between the sprocket holes to come up with any big improvement on the system. The standard bitmap yields a maximum of roughly 550,000 bits per second, but only 320,000 bits are used for the primary soundtrack. The rest is used for error correction. I could see some tweaking being done to raise the main audio bitrate to 384kb/s or 448kb/s to match what is on standard DVDs. However, a lot less data would be left for the error correction function and risk harming system reliability.
Dolby TrueHD is something entirely different from the standard Dolby Digital format used in movie theaters. It operates at much higher bitrates and bit word lengths. It can do 24-bit 96kHz audio in lossless compressed form and do so across 8 or more channels. It can feature bitrates in excess of 6Mb/s.
Dolby Digital Plus operates at lower bitrates than Dolby TrueHD, but its data load is well above the 640kb/s maximum allowed by standard Dolby Digital decoders.
FWIW, DTS' new DTS-HD formats aren't getting used in commercial movie theaters either. DTS-HD High Res and DTS-HD Master are similar in function to Dolby TrueHD, but can be ballooned out to huge bitrates, up to 24.5 million bits per second played from Blu-Ray discs across HDMI 1.3 digital connections. 24-bit 192kHz audio is possible.
With use of a dual-system approach, any of that kind of audio is possible with a 35mm or 70mm film presentation. But there simply isn't any way anyone is going to print that kind of digital data on a 35mm film strip and get reliable playback from microscopic data spot sizes.
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