How to burn an Audio DVD
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I bought some 192KHZ, 24 Bit FLAC Files.
I would like to burn these to an audio DVD so I can play them through my Blu Ray player on my home system.
How would I go about doing this?
dvd flac dvd-audio
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up vote
1
down vote
favorite
I bought some 192KHZ, 24 Bit FLAC Files.
I would like to burn these to an audio DVD so I can play them through my Blu Ray player on my home system.
How would I go about doing this?
dvd flac dvd-audio
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
favorite
up vote
1
down vote
favorite
I bought some 192KHZ, 24 Bit FLAC Files.
I would like to burn these to an audio DVD so I can play them through my Blu Ray player on my home system.
How would I go about doing this?
dvd flac dvd-audio
I bought some 192KHZ, 24 Bit FLAC Files.
I would like to burn these to an audio DVD so I can play them through my Blu Ray player on my home system.
How would I go about doing this?
dvd flac dvd-audio
dvd flac dvd-audio
asked Nov 20 at 16:37
bkabbott
4318
4318
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add a comment |
1 Answer
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It's a waste of money to do that. 192 KHz, 24-bit FLAC files are lossless and very high quality, so get a 256GB USB 3.0 flash drive and copy/paste the FLAC files to a USB flash drive instead. FLAC files on USB flash drives produce a cleaner sound than DVDs without the DVD audio haze. A 192 KHz, 24-bit FLAC file also sounds better than a prerecorded audio CD when played in the same Blu-ray player. And unlike most DVDs USB flash drives are rewriteable without any loss in audio quality.
Keep the flash drive plugged in all the time in the Blu-ray's USB port so you can listen to the music that you copied onto the flash drive by using the Blu-ray player's remote control to navigate on-screen to the selected music file.
This answer was very helpful.
– bkabbott
Nov 20 at 17:47
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
1
down vote
accepted
It's a waste of money to do that. 192 KHz, 24-bit FLAC files are lossless and very high quality, so get a 256GB USB 3.0 flash drive and copy/paste the FLAC files to a USB flash drive instead. FLAC files on USB flash drives produce a cleaner sound than DVDs without the DVD audio haze. A 192 KHz, 24-bit FLAC file also sounds better than a prerecorded audio CD when played in the same Blu-ray player. And unlike most DVDs USB flash drives are rewriteable without any loss in audio quality.
Keep the flash drive plugged in all the time in the Blu-ray's USB port so you can listen to the music that you copied onto the flash drive by using the Blu-ray player's remote control to navigate on-screen to the selected music file.
This answer was very helpful.
– bkabbott
Nov 20 at 17:47
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
accepted
It's a waste of money to do that. 192 KHz, 24-bit FLAC files are lossless and very high quality, so get a 256GB USB 3.0 flash drive and copy/paste the FLAC files to a USB flash drive instead. FLAC files on USB flash drives produce a cleaner sound than DVDs without the DVD audio haze. A 192 KHz, 24-bit FLAC file also sounds better than a prerecorded audio CD when played in the same Blu-ray player. And unlike most DVDs USB flash drives are rewriteable without any loss in audio quality.
Keep the flash drive plugged in all the time in the Blu-ray's USB port so you can listen to the music that you copied onto the flash drive by using the Blu-ray player's remote control to navigate on-screen to the selected music file.
This answer was very helpful.
– bkabbott
Nov 20 at 17:47
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
accepted
up vote
1
down vote
accepted
It's a waste of money to do that. 192 KHz, 24-bit FLAC files are lossless and very high quality, so get a 256GB USB 3.0 flash drive and copy/paste the FLAC files to a USB flash drive instead. FLAC files on USB flash drives produce a cleaner sound than DVDs without the DVD audio haze. A 192 KHz, 24-bit FLAC file also sounds better than a prerecorded audio CD when played in the same Blu-ray player. And unlike most DVDs USB flash drives are rewriteable without any loss in audio quality.
Keep the flash drive plugged in all the time in the Blu-ray's USB port so you can listen to the music that you copied onto the flash drive by using the Blu-ray player's remote control to navigate on-screen to the selected music file.
It's a waste of money to do that. 192 KHz, 24-bit FLAC files are lossless and very high quality, so get a 256GB USB 3.0 flash drive and copy/paste the FLAC files to a USB flash drive instead. FLAC files on USB flash drives produce a cleaner sound than DVDs without the DVD audio haze. A 192 KHz, 24-bit FLAC file also sounds better than a prerecorded audio CD when played in the same Blu-ray player. And unlike most DVDs USB flash drives are rewriteable without any loss in audio quality.
Keep the flash drive plugged in all the time in the Blu-ray's USB port so you can listen to the music that you copied onto the flash drive by using the Blu-ray player's remote control to navigate on-screen to the selected music file.
edited Nov 20 at 17:16
answered Nov 20 at 17:09
karel
55k11121139
55k11121139
This answer was very helpful.
– bkabbott
Nov 20 at 17:47
add a comment |
This answer was very helpful.
– bkabbott
Nov 20 at 17:47
This answer was very helpful.
– bkabbott
Nov 20 at 17:47
This answer was very helpful.
– bkabbott
Nov 20 at 17:47
add a comment |
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