Wow! What a strange product!
http://us.creative.com/products/product.asp?category=1&subcategory=207&product=14191
http://us.creative.com/products/product.asp?category=1&subcategory=207&product=14191
JonUrban said:Wow! What a strange product!
http://us.creative.com/products/product.asp?category=1&subcategory=207&product=14191
neil wilkes said:Creative Labs?
Odds are very high it will be DTS files, not DTS-WAV as most Creative Labs products seem to all use a 48KHz sample rate.
If the unit worksKevinD9052 said:Can this be used to archive decoded quad vinyl onto DTS CDs? The multi channel analog inputs would work. Decoders would feed them. But how do I get the DTS bitstream into my computer for disc burning?
Quadzilla said:Guys, where can I find one of these? Canada or the USA ... either is OK, but I would like to try bricks and mortar for a change. I am not opposed to the Internet, but I remember back in the old days it used to by kinda fun to go into ... what were they called again? ... oh yeah ... stores!
I think that this thingy would be a great addition to my Yamaha CDR/HD recorder. It has an optical digital input, and I can record to the hard drive to see how it came out before burning/wasting a CDR.
I use a pair of Burwen TNE7000 click and pop removers from the outputs of my quad decoders, and I could connect the tape outputs of the Burwen units to the inputs of the DTS encoder.
I will be back in the US at the end of March if there is nowhere in SW Ontario I can get one.
Cheers, Mike.
Mike, Jon's original post has a link that takes you right where you need to go to buy this device.Quadzilla said:NOBODY can tell me where I can get one?
SoNic said:It is strange, it does DTS with 44.1 kHz sampling rate? [/url]
newbyquad said:Hi,
Could I record any stereo QSD-1'd output to this device and make my own DTS discs?
That is how I would use it. More than transferring quad stuff to discs.
It outputs a DTS-encoded 16 bit, 44.1 kHz digital stream via optical or coaxial SPDIF. You can take that output to a PC's sound card for recording and subsequent DTS CD construction. Or, as Christopher noted earlier, you can input directly to a CD recorder for "real time" DTS CD construction. This was not the intent of this device, but it will work.newbyquad said:So with this device, I can play any stereo recording into my QSD-1 and then output that 4 channel QSD-1 information into this and it will automatically make a 4 channel DTS recording?
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