That would make sense that the current Dolby decoders would be able to decode AC-4. I guess I was a little confused when I read
ATSC 3.0 Dolby Audio Handbook February 2020 publication which discussed AC-4 Decoders.
Bottom of page 11: "At the time of this publication, only one ATSC 3.0-capable IRD (Integrated Receiver/
Decoder) with AC-4 decoding capability is commercially available (DS Broadcast BGD4100)
which can provide PCM audio to an external AC-3 or E-AC-3 encoder. The AC-4 to AC-3 or
E-AC-3 transcode functionality can also be accomplished using the AC-4 pro-decoder and
AC-3/E-AC-3 encoder SDKs, which are available."
The above makes me wonder if my TV is converting the AC-4 to an AC-3 stream before sending it to my receiver?
There is additional talk about the Dolby Multi-Stream Decoder MS12 (page 12). It goes on to talk about the MS12 v2.3 to meet the minimum requirements to provide the next gen audio experience. Is there a way for me to check if my TV or Denon have MS12? and if so, identify which version it is? Obviously I would assume at least my TV and/or receiver has some version of MS12, otherwise I wouldn't be hearing any audio.