7.1 Discrete DVD titles? Exist or not

M

Matt48625

Audiophyte
What is the latest on 7.1 Titles? And what surround modes should I be using. If 7.1 discs are available is there an index somewhere?

Can anyone help with these questions?
 
j_garcia

j_garcia

Audioholic Jedi
The best you can do is 6.1 on DVD, though a 7.1 receiver handles the sound the same way and can process to 7.1 correctly. You can only get true, discrete 7.1 on Blu-ray.
 
M

Matt48625

Audiophyte
Does anyone know a link to 6.1 titles available?
 
j_garcia

j_garcia

Audioholic Jedi
I'd check the movies forum here and do a search for 6.1. There are a few threads that also discuss where to find listings of titles and/or the best ones to look for.
 
S

SVT CAMR

Enthusiast
I found 1 at block buster! It was for the kids. Iron Man on Blu-Ray.
You will not need to set receiver to any mode but you will need a blu-ray player as stated above. Your receiver if capable will automatically switch over to 7.1 DTS Master HD. I can tell you it is awesome and wish there were more movies. I was a big kid and loved Iron Man especially in 7.1.
After inserting the disc into the Blu-ray player you will need to go to the disk menu of the DVD and select the format. It is located under languages.
 
GlocksRock

GlocksRock

Audioholic Spartan
If you have a 7.1 speaker setup, and a receiver with Dolby Pro Logic IIx, you can create a 7.1 soundfield with any input source.
 
S

SVT CAMR

Enthusiast
That is true but, it's not the same as the true format. I do not even bother with any of those what I call phantom formats. For whole year I could not figure out how to unlock the lossless modes but when I did I realized the true value of Dolby true HD, Dolby digital 5.1, 7.1 DTS Master HD. If the output source cannot produce these formats I just have the default set to all channel stereo for any PCM format.
I no longer even touch any of the format modes in the receiver. The receiver will automatically sense what is being output from the source. The only time I need to set any formats is on a DVD that offers multiple formats. As stated above you can find these formats in languages when inserting the DVD after it loads and after the trailers are finished. Yes, you will need a blu-ray player with HDMI cabling.
For the newbies read you manuals for all your equipment 10x if needed and know your menus. There are also settings that need to be selected on the blu-ray when setting it up for the first time. Once you set it up you can set it and forget it. The receiver will do the rest. After that you will need to balance the speaker system to optimize listening for these lossless modes. With that the only thing I usually touch from time to time is the bass setting when I run the computer into the LCD for some reason the booms a little louder. For the computer I use a toslink cable. For all the rest of the equipment with video I use HDMI cables.
Hope what I wrote helps some of you. It took many hours of reading and selecting the menu to figure it all out. Now there is no need to mess with the receiver or the blu-ray. It's plug and play. You do not need the most expensive equipment to achieve this either but it will need to have HDMI inputs and outputs and support these formats. Don't sweat it if you do not have a 7.1 system either. I have found only 1 DVD so far that supports the 7.1. A 5.1 system sounds awesome too.
On a 7.1 system running in 5.1 format the side speakers will only be working and the rear speakers will be turned off. I did not like this because I wanted more separation. So I put banana plug on the speaker wires and when running in 5.1 format I switch the rears speaker so they run on the side speakers output. This gave me the separation I wanted from front to back. If there is ever a movie in 7.1 which 99.9 percent of the time there is not I would just switch the banana plugs back to where they belong. My equipment is very accessible. No big deal. Once you have everything working you will stop messing with the equipment and begin to really enjoy some movies. It took me over a year to figure things out because nobody could help me. Then I found this site and the key answers I needed about formats helped me finish it off. Sorry for the long post I just want to try to help out with the basics. Danny
 
S

Socio

Audiophyte
If you have a 7.1 speaker setup, and a receiver with Dolby Pro Logic IIx, you can create a 7.1 soundfield with any input source.
Or if you are using 5.1 analog out from your DVD\Blu Ray to your receiver and have 7.1 analog inputs on your receiver you can split the surround left and right analog RCA outs from the player and run the split to something like a Sony SDP E800 surround processer main left and right analog in and use its Dolby Prologic setting to create rear left and right.

Then run the surround left and right from the surround processor to your rear left and right analog inputs on your receiver for 7.1.
 

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