2005-02-25, 09:49 AM
in switzerland, a lot of movies are broadcasted in what is called 'zweikanalton'... (i do not know what the official english word is for this... the words translated to englisch mean 'dual channel audio'.
if a movie is broadcasted in 'zweikanalton', the left audio-channel contains the dubbed german soundtrack of the movie, while on the right channel you hear the original soundtrack (hmm... or is it vice versa? well... doesn't matter).
normal tvs are able to somehow detect if a transmission is in 'zweikanalton'-mode, and you hear only the left audio-signal (of course you hear sound on both speakers... but only the left (or right) audio-signal is used for both speakers).
with the remote you can switch between dubbed and original soundtrack.
i am using a hauppauge pvr-350 and before i switched to gb-pvr (which is great! i used the hauppauge wintv-application which came with the tuner card.
it did detect the 'zweikanalton' autommatically and let me choose the left or right audiochannel (well.. not with the remote... i had to set the option in the audio-config-dialog).
in gbpvr i hear allways both channels.... left german, right english (or whatever language the movie was shot in).
it's not that important that gb-pvr automatically would detect the 'zweikanalton' (well.. would be nice to have *g*). but it would be great if i would be able switch the audio-channels with the remote... kind of a cycle...
,--> stereo --> left only --> right only -,
'--------------------------------------'
i did not find something in the forum or documentation (well... how could i if i don't even know how this feature is called in english...? *g*)
is there a functionallity? if not, this pos should possibly get moved to the wishlist section :-)
thanks a lot and greetings from switzerland
daniel
if a movie is broadcasted in 'zweikanalton', the left audio-channel contains the dubbed german soundtrack of the movie, while on the right channel you hear the original soundtrack (hmm... or is it vice versa? well... doesn't matter).
normal tvs are able to somehow detect if a transmission is in 'zweikanalton'-mode, and you hear only the left audio-signal (of course you hear sound on both speakers... but only the left (or right) audio-signal is used for both speakers).
with the remote you can switch between dubbed and original soundtrack.
i am using a hauppauge pvr-350 and before i switched to gb-pvr (which is great! i used the hauppauge wintv-application which came with the tuner card.
it did detect the 'zweikanalton' autommatically and let me choose the left or right audiochannel (well.. not with the remote... i had to set the option in the audio-config-dialog).
in gbpvr i hear allways both channels.... left german, right english (or whatever language the movie was shot in).
it's not that important that gb-pvr automatically would detect the 'zweikanalton' (well.. would be nice to have *g*). but it would be great if i would be able switch the audio-channels with the remote... kind of a cycle...
,--> stereo --> left only --> right only -,
'--------------------------------------'
i did not find something in the forum or documentation (well... how could i if i don't even know how this feature is called in english...? *g*)
is there a functionallity? if not, this pos should possibly get moved to the wishlist section :-)
thanks a lot and greetings from switzerland
daniel
AMD 1600mHz, 512 M RAM, 20+160 GB drive, Hauppauge PVR-350 + PVR-150 + PVR-150MCE, Win XP Pro SP3, using software decoding.
There is a theory which states that if ever anyone discovers exactly what the Universe is for and why it is here, it will instantly disappear and be replaced by something even more bizarre and inexplicable.
There is another theory which states that this has already happened.
(The Restaurant at the End of the Universe)
There is a theory which states that if ever anyone discovers exactly what the Universe is for and why it is here, it will instantly disappear and be replaced by something even more bizarre and inexplicable.
There is another theory which states that this has already happened.
(The Restaurant at the End of the Universe)