Closed GoogleCodeExporter closed 9 years ago
what receiver do you have (manufacturer / model)?
what software do you use? does this happen with both DTS and AC3 media streams
or
just with AC3?
Original comment by dogb...@gmail.com
on 24 Feb 2008 at 11:14
hi dogber1
Thanks for your answer, and sorry for multiposting, but I had errors when
posting so
I thought it didn't work.
My receiver is a Cambridge audio model Azur 540R.
For audio playback I am using mediaportal + AC3Filter + reclock, and it does
happen
with AC3 and DTS.
regards
julien
Original comment by jso...@gmail.com
on 24 Feb 2008 at 10:04
Hi dogber1,
First thanks for the great driver. I think I am having a similar problem to
Julien.
Starting from a fresh install of Windows XP I installed your driver and
everything
was working great. I have several DTS cds and the all played correctly through
my
reciever.
After a few days, my system no longer plays DTS cds correctly. My reciever
will
flash as if it picked up a source change, recognize the files as normal stereo,
and
play static. If I run the setup program for your driver again, the reciever
will
flash during the install (as if it picked up a new source), and the DTS cds
start
working correctly again. If a reboot the system, DTS stops working and I have
to
reinstall the driver.
I tried re-installing Windows XP and the same thing happened again. Everything
worked fine for a few days, and then suddenly stopped.
In both cases I noticed that DTS had stopped working shortly after running a
Windows
Update and installing a virtual drive program.
I am running:
Windows XP
Diamond Multimedia Xtreme 7.1 Sound (XS71)
Connected via Digital Coax to Onkyo TX-SR601 receiver
Original comment by jacobhy...@gmail.com
on 6 Mar 2008 at 1:13
Hi,
thanks for the report.
My guess is that an application which is started during bootup messes with the
volume sliders, specifically the wave volume slider - it must be maxed out for
the
kmixer being bitperfect. Another possible cause could be an application which
has
opened a recording or playback stream on the soundcard (e.g. skype) - the
hardware
requires the same sample rate for both the recording and playback stream, so a
44.1kHz DTS wave stream gets converted to 48kHz by the kmixer if a 48 kHz
recording
stream has been opened by some other application. This results in the described
"flicker" of the DTS signal.
In order to circumvent the kmixer, foobar in conjunction with the kernel
streaming
plugin might be worth a try.
I'd like to hear back from you whether you were able to resolve this issue or
not.
Cheers,
dogbert
Original comment by dogb...@gmail.com
on 6 Mar 2008 at 1:34
Hi Dogbert,
Thanks again for the feeback, it solved my problem. I think I must have
inadvertantly adjusted the mixer setting for wave output. Windows was just
defaulting back to that setting every time a rebooted. Sorry if this
information is
already posted elsewhere on your site.
Thanks,
Jacob
Original comment by jacobhy...@gmail.com
on 7 Mar 2008 at 1:36
jsoyer, that's a bug of ReClock - uninstalling it and using ffdshow instead
solves
the problem on my system.
Original comment by dogb...@gmail.com
on 20 Apr 2008 at 4:46
Original issue reported on code.google.com by
jso...@gmail.com
on 22 Feb 2008 at 10:11