Classe SSP-600 Manuel Du Propriétaire page 34

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multichannel formats
post-processing possibilities Once the SSP-600 has decoded the signal it is provided in the appropriate manner, you
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All manuals and user guides at all-guides.com
By contrast, modern soundtracks use discrete channels of information. That is, each
speaker has a distinct signal that is completely independent of every other channel. This
approach is clearly more desirable, since it gives the movie makers more creative control
over the quality of your experience. Musicians also prefer discrete formats, since it allows
them to place their instruments and voices with greater precision, to create the musical
effects they desire.
There is a host of various multichannel formats available. Here is a summary grid to help
you sort out the possibilities.
Name
# Chs
analog stereo
2
multichannel in
6-8
Dolby Surround
4
Pro Logic
Dolby Digital
1.0-5.1
(AC-3)
Dolby Digital EX
6.1
DTS
1.0–5.1
DTS-ES Matrix
6.1
DTS-ES Discrete
6.1
still have some options as to whether you would like additional processing of the signal.
This point is sometimes confusing. The first thing any surround processor must do is
to recover the various channels that were intended to be delivered into your home. This
might be a single mono signal, or a Dolby Digital Surround EX soundtrack with 6.1
channels, or anything in between; it may have been delivered to your home via a satellite
receiver, a cable set top box, or a simple DVD disc. Regardless, the first task is to recover
as many channels as are being delivered, with great accuracy and fidelity.
Having done so, however, it may make sense to provide further processing, after the fact.
Hence the notion of post-processing.
For example: movie soundtracks are created in highly-standardized environments, in
order to offer excellent performance in large, commercial theaters. Acoustically, your
home is a radically different environment than that for which the movie soundtracks
were optimized. Therefore it makes sense that you might want to compensate for the
differences between the intended environment (a commercial theater) and your actual
environment (a domestic living room or family room).
Discrete?
Notes
yes
as found on almost all sources,
including tape decks & CD players
yes
a multichannel analog input used
mostly for SACD & DVD-Audio
matrix
the original matrix decoding system
designed to squeeze four channels
into two and then retrieve them
yes
the most common modern digital
source, used in HDTV, DVD, etc.
mostly yes
the center rear channel is a matrixed
channel hidden in the left and right
surround channels; all others are
discrete
yes
similar to Dolby Digital in practice,
though it uses a different technology
mostly yes
the center rear channel is a matrixed
channel hidden in the left and right
surround channels; all others are
discrete
yes
all 6.1 channels are discrete

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