Can someone here point me in the right direction for Volume Normalization?
Reading a previous post and researching what was said, I think I may be misusing the DSP and Volume mode.
I have a "jukebox" pc running MC with lots of music and music videos. Some of the music (and videos) are encoded with 5.1 sound.
I have the proper output device set in the Audio panel, the PC talks through an HDMI Video card to a decent receiver that can decode all types of signals.
Naturally with the different material, from older 128 mp3s, to 5.1 FLACS at 8200 kbps, and old wmv videos along with 5.1 Blu Ray rips, I have quite some time keeping the volume relatively the same. We spend way too much time racing for the volume knob when one title is way louder.
I have BitStream set to HDMI, the DSP has both Volume sections on and left at default settings.
From what I read, I should use Internal Volume Mode to get the best sound and have the dsp work, but then I see reference to the dsp not working if it is "passed through".
Does the DSP have any effect on files like 5.1 or DTS where the receiver sees the multichannel signal? Or is this a lightbulb moment where I understand the word "passthrough"
Is passthrough used for all multichannel files and the DSP ignores them? What if I leave it on Bitstream? Does that mean the Volume DSP doesn't work at all?
When I run an audio analyze on the 5.1 flacs, volume numbers for each channel are recorded. Are those used, or again, is it all thrown out the window if bitstreaming is on? I guess I don't understand the Volume normalization feature..
If bitstreaming being on removes the dsp, then there is nothing I can do to regulate the volume between DTS, MP3, FLACs, and MKVs (and everything else)?
Another machine runs the same files, but uses Optical connections. To get all the 5.1s to work, I turn on Dolby Digital out in the DSP and all the multichannel files play correctly. Am I negating the DSPs volume section with the DD turned on?
Thanks