I was referring to these comments, where you said you had not listened enough to know if it was playing 6 channels or 2:
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And - most interestingly - it IS playing 6 channels, according to the "Audio Path" info.
I have yet to listen to sufficient to see if my ears agree.
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If the file is 6 channels, and it plays 6 channels, then it's just a glitch?
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I'm going to listen to a few files & see.
And since listening to just 1 file immediately differentiates between 6 channels and 2 channels....
Despite the value "2" in the channels field, the file is correctly played with 6 channels out - using my new-found understanding of the "audio path" information pop-up.
This statement is a bit confusing, because whether you look at the Audio Path information or not does not in the smallest degree affect what sound comes out. It is an informational display. This statement makes it seem like you were only able to determine the file plays correctly by looking at the Audio Path.
You should, and must, be able to tell by listening 6 channels from 2 without looking at audio path. I'm sure you'd agree.
So to to clarify, can you please confirm:
1. When MC indicates 6 channels you actually hear 6 channels.
2. When MC indicates 2 channels on the DTS encoded files named WAV you only hear 2 channels
Please positively confirm or contradict the above.If you only hear 2 channels with one of the WAV-named DTS files, please make an example file available for examination.
This would be a file that mediainfo says has 6-channel DTS, but MC plays as 2 channels.
So I refer back to my previous note - is there any way to adjust/correct that channels value in the database?
The [Channels] field is not user editable. It is determined by MC when the file is imported. It is re-assessed by MC when the operation "Update library from tags" is performed on the file. Other than that it does not change.
So here's the thing:
I've already explained why the channels field says what it says. Not being able to distinguish visibly is an annoyance, I agree, and I think it should be corrected, but it hasn't been corrected yet. DTS files are not new, but they are rare.
The more important issue here, that everyone has been trying to address for you, is the playback of files containing 6-channel DTS-encoded audio that are named WAV and thus show 2 channels in the interface.
If you hear 6 channels of music, it is decoding the file properly.
If you hear 2 channels of actual music, instead of 6 channels, MC is not decoding the file properly.
If you hear garbage or distortion or nothing, it is not decoding the file at all.
So the what and why of that needs to be assessed. Everything is supposed to work properly, since MC has supported DTS in WAV since MC16. So is there a bug, or are your files bad?
I can't see how further progress can be made without a sample file.