Dolby E

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Dolby E logo.

Dolby E is a

stereo
pair of digital audio tracks.

Up to six channels, such as a 5.1 mix, can be recorded as 16-bit Dolby E data. However, if more than six channels are required, such as 5.1 plus a stereo

LtRt, the AES3
data must be formatted as 20-bit audio. This increases capacity to eight channels.

Dolby E should never reach home viewers, as it is intended for use during post-production when moving multichannel material between production facilities or broadcasters. It is decoded prior to transmission.

It is very important to ensure that a Dolby E stream is never played through monitors or headphones without decoding. Undecoded Dolby E data will be converted to analog as full scale (0

loudspeakers
or hearing. Unambiguous media labeling is essential to avoid this.

Products

Dolby E encoding and decoding is implemented using commercially available hardware or software.

Hardware

  • Dolby DP571
  • Dolby DP572
  • Dolby DP568
  • Dolby DP580
  • Dolby DP591
  • Dolby DP600
  • Dolby DP600C

Software

References

  1. ^ DolbyE Decoding with FFMpeg 5.1
  2. ^ DolbyE decoding with Avisynth
  3. ^ Dolby Encode and Decode using The eNGINE
  4. ^ a b "Minnetonka Audio". www.telosalliance.com.

External links