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This topic comprises 2 pages: 1 2
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Topic: Computer not playing DVD audio
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Leo Enticknap
Film God
Posts: 7474
From: Loma Linda, CA
Registered: Jul 2000
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posted 10-23-2005 05:05 AM
Can you get sound from a normal audio CD (as distinct from a CD-ROM with audio content, which you mentioned in your first post)? If so, then the sound card is receiving and playing back the signal from the audio cable which Daryl points is for analogue CD audio only, but for some reason it's not getting the DVD audio from your DVD playback software.
In that case I can't think of anything else it could be apart from an issue with your DVD playback software, because if it'll play audio content from a CD-ROM, then other software and the card are both obviously handling wave sound OK. It might be set to output coaxial digital only, or 5.1 sound which your 2.1 card can't deal with, or something like that. If you've never been able to get sound out of a DVD, the playback application might be a trial version which will only output the picture until you register it and/or pay a fee.
To cut a long story short, if you can play sound from a normal audio CD and other internal wave sources, but not the DVD playback application, then that rules out hardware and drivers and leaves the DVD playback application as the only possible culprit.
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Stephen Furley
Film God
Posts: 3059
From: Coulsdon, Croydon, England
Registered: May 2002
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posted 10-23-2005 05:35 AM
What format of audio stream are you playing on the DVD? i.e. is it Dolby Digital, MPEG layer 2, PCM or DTS? Since Dolby Digital is the most common, I am guessing that this is what you are using. Do you have a DVD with PCM audio? It is most often used on music videos, often classical music. If not, can you make one? A lot of cheap, home type, DVD creating software produces only PCM tracks. If you can play a PCM track, but not a Dolby Digital one, then it sounds like the Dolby AC-3 decoding software has got screwed up. Sounds like it might be time for a re-install. Most computer DVD playing software will not handle DTS tracks, and I believe that MPEG audio is even more rare over there than it is here.
It's unlikely, but just a thought on why you may be able to play the CD-Rom; some CD-Roms with audio, mainly very early ones, were actually partly CD-Rom, and partly normal 'red book' CD-Audio discs. They played the audio exactly as a normal audio CD, which in those days was via the analogue audio cable from the drive. Could the CD-Rom you can play be one of these? If so, you may have the analogue cable connected, and it is playing through that, but cannot handle digital audio via the ATAPI, or SCSI interface from the drive.
Jim Taylor's book 'DVD Demystified' comes with useful test/demo disc, which has almost all of the features which a DVD can have, including some pretty obsuvre ones; the main ones missing are PAL video, it's all NTSC, and MPEG layer 2 audio. I have the second edition, but I believe a third edition is going to be published. I have a few, three I think, DVDs with MPEG audio, but they were all 2 channel only. I managed to find a copy of the original release of 'Jerry Maguire', which has a full multi-channel MPEG track on it; I bought it just for that reason, so I had an example of this type of track.
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