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Re: realtime stereo to surround
From: "Dan" <danielalbertini72@yahoo.com>
> That sounds like an awesome system extraordinaire!!! My friend and
> teacher Rick Turner may be
> able to help you with more specific design? R. Neve and him exchange
> neural transmissions on a
> regular basis. Rick had a huge hand in designing and building The
> Grateful Dead soundsystems and
> instruments he designed and built!!! I design and build custom guitars
> that represent countless
> challenging hours of commitment to my field, the art of luthiery. I sub
> out electronic work
> utilizing the elite high end pickups Seymour Duncan, Sunrise, EMG, etc.
> --- Qua Veda <qua@oregon.com> wrote:
>
>> I have a RME FF800 that has 8outputs. I have 5 identical cabinets plus
>a
>> sub. I use 5 outs to go to FrontL, FrontR, C, RearL, RearR. My Front
>L&R
>> have a special crossover for the sub, so they get full range, and the
>> crossover takes care of the split.
>>
>> I was able to get a DVD to play through the RME. After some trial and
>> error, I was able to get it to play through the correct speakers. Home
>> and
>> computer surround processors use a special processor for splitting into
>> 5.1
>> , but I'm not using that.
>>
>> So now, I am very interested in experimenting with "normal" and
>> "abnormal"
>> surround and spatial effects. I look forward to trying some of Per's
>and
>> Stephen's suggestions. But it will have to wait for awhile since my
>> gear
>> is packed away due to remodeling. But I'm looking forward to some fun
>> :-)
Well, this has knocked loose some previously-unknown bits from the deep!
I
stared sniffing up surround processing and remembered [d-oh!] an
experiment
with an old track ("Fever Dream") to remix for surround, using Microsoft's
WAVAVIMUX tool - it combines the separate channel wav files and an avi
video
(optional) into something that can be played through or on a surround
system
etc.
http://www.microsoft.com/windows/windowsmedia/howto/articles/creating71audio.aspx
I recall that one of the wonderful things about surround was a bit like
dolby: if it's already encoded into the audio stream, you don't have to do
anything special to decode for listening. (For instance, duplicating a
dolby-encoded tape: one turns the dolby off for the tape-to-tape and it
remains encoded appropriately. How many of us didn't do this in the
beginning, I wonder?)
So I'm going to mess about with the output from the vsts I posted links to
earlier, and see if I can exploit the record monitor for "What you hear"
in
order to see if a CD-R encoded using this sounds different than a CD-R of
the same piece (before segregation-encoding) when played on a DVD player
with surround. I'm cheap, part-Scottish, and don't ignore these little
things when they pop up - and can't resist the idea of presenting a method
for surround recording that doesn't require you to spend a year's salary
on
a DolbyTM or THXTM system.
S.