I do believe that handbrake can stitch Mkv chapters
It might have problems if all the files don't contain exactly the same video and audio streams. You can give it a try.
I do believe that handbrake can stitch Mkv chapters
What I need is a way to identify individual chapters within a full video so they show up like what happens with CUE files for music. I use KODI,
What I need is a way to identify individual chapters within a full video so they show up like what happens with CUE files for music. I use KODI,
There may be a way to this. I'll have a play later today and see.
As always you were right, not atmos on MKV or MP4 on the panny, but DTS-HD yes but lpcm 7.1 neither, Will give MKA a try.To play Atmos you’ll need to create a file that can contain an Atmos stream that your panny can play.
For audio only playback:
MMH tool ‘Extract Audio from MKV’ can do that as an MKA or M4A file but your panny probably can’t play m4a files with Atmos.
For video just use mkv
Try clicking the drop-down arrow under the 10-chapter title and uncheck all audio options except Dolby TrueHD.When I "ripped" the file, I opened the blu-ray in MakeMKV, and then made the MKV file using the "Make MKV" button:
That solved the problem. I had a nagging feeling that I had forgotten a step in the process. Thanks for setting me straight yet again, Jonathan.Try clicking the drop-down arrow under the 10-chapter title and uncheck all audio options except Dolby TrueHD.
In relation to: Tears for Fears, Tipping Point...Are native ATMOS files on disc lossy or lossless (or both, as on a disc that offers both a DTS and DTS-MA version)?
Disc-wise.... Both the DTS-HD MA (6Ch 4,808Kbps 48.0KHz 24-bit) and Dolby (TrueHD) Atmos (8/16Ch 6,505 Kbps 48.0KHz 24-bit) streams are lossless, which also contain a lossy DTS (1,509Kbps 48.0KHz) and Dolby Digital EX (640Kbps 48.0KHz) core
I'm not with you... What has "DTS and DVD-A" got to do with your Dolby Atmos question?Duh on me, I meant DTS and DVD-A.
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