Congratulations!
I did some testing and you can also put the dtsdecoderdll.dll file in the Windows/System32 folder. This way if you update LAV Audio Decoder you won't need to place the file in the LAV folder. The LAV Audio Decoder will automatically find and use the DTS-HD decoder.
mojave -
Thanks for above advice!
However, all is not well on the audio-front now with LAV Audio Decoder now up and running. Playing
Baraka on Blu-ray, which sports 24-bit/96kHz sample freq. sound, there are sometimes small audio drop-outs, heard as the sound suddenly fading out and in, and at a certain place in the film(haven't checked out the entire film yet) it suddenly speeds up, as if fast-winding as few seconds through a scene, and the goes back to normal.
Moreover, today when trying out Criterion's Blu-ray edition of
The Thin Red Line there's a longer scene of a sound-power conversation between Col. Tall and Capt. Staros, eventually having Col. Tall go nuts and Staros then "refuses to obey orders," and towards the end of that scene of the ongoing conversation Staros suddenly has to duck due to some mortars hitting just near by, and the last and nearest mortar hit, being the most powerfully sounding, caused my sound system to distort horribly (especially in the bass) just when the mortar impacts, almost sounding as if the voice coils of the bass units are bottoming out - and the sound level was in no way anywhere near the limit of the system. Startled by this I then played the scene again at a much lower volume, and it sounded just as horrible. Having Fox's European Blu-ray version as well I played that disc and particular scene also, and the same phenomenon sounded (horribly) through. What causes this distortion, even at very low volumes? I sounds as if a microphone is subjected with too loud a sound level, causing it to distort(sorry, English is not my first language, and I don't know how to describe this any further).
Later I tried out the French Blu-ray of
Bright Star, and being that the film defaults to the dubbed French DTS HD MA track I then switched to the English DTS HD MA track, and noticed the sound level now being lower(?). Puzzled by this I switched back to the French track and the sound level was indeed again higher, then back to the English track (with a lower sound level) where I skipped through some scenes, and this suddenly had the sound become loud again, as on the French track, and then remained that way! I then inserted the
Collateral(by Michael Mann) Blu-ray into my HTPC. The film started out with the DTS HD MA track, then I switched to the commentary track which became very loud, and then back again to the DTS HD MA track it started out with, only now the sound level remained the high level of the commentary track..!
I'm really confused about this, and something is definately wrong somewhere. Any suggestions would be welcome...