There are a lot of tools that do not properly report 7.1 audio, showing it as "5.1" instead. I did not have any sound problems or sound mismatches with DVDs so this seems to be a BluRay only bug. Now clearly the English track is there because PowerDVD works fine, but why is the Japanese track being copied when I unselected (Japanese, Spanish, and French)? And why is the Windows 10 DVD player not seeing the English track when PowerDVD 13 can? The only difference was the first Hobbit Movie did not have 7.1 sound, so it could have something to do with that. The first move I did had the English sound track but not on the second Hobbit movie where I got Japanese and the commentary tracks again. I also tried 2 other BluRay disks, first 2 Hobbit extended Movies, and got different results. I did have Japanese, Spanish, and the commentary (but French was missing). I then started over and didn’t unselect anything, but there was still no English track. I then switched to each sound title and found that: title 0 and 1 had no sound, title 2 was Japanese (which I did not select), and title 4 had the English commentary track. The PowerDVD 13 played the move in English but when I use the Windows 10 DVD player there is no sound. I then tried playing the movie using two DVD players, windows 10 DVD player and PowerDVD 13. and selected English and English subtitles and then ran the software. ![]() I unselect everything and then select all the sound modes 7.1, 5.1, DD, etc. ![]() However the software appears to have bugs copying the right sound tracks. Unless you have a pretty good guide, like when you see pcm or DD 48k always use that.I download and started to play with the makemkv software this weekend to see if I wanted to buy the makemkv HD version to save my BluRay disks to PC. So what I will try to do when I get off work is rip a movie with the specific audio channel. Maybe I'm confused about how to set the audio track to default.Īt first I was transferring all english audio tracks then using mkvmerge GUI to cut out the ones I didn't need. I know how to change subs always on to only on when I select them (by setting default flag from yes to default in mkvmerge GUI). What I want is to rip the full file size of the movie, with the most playable audio track (on blu-ray players and my computer) that also has the options to have subs. Can I ASSUME that whenever I see pcm, that's always the audio track I want for great quality, and just cut out the rest (in makemkv or afterwards in MKVMerge GUI). I take it from your question that I made it far worse. 3 I simply removed pcm and put DD at position 1. 2 I move pcm to position 2 and DD to position 1. ![]() So I tried three things, each making it worse. If you need to remove a track or would like to reorganise them into a specific order you need to remux the file using MMG, or from MakeMKV, select the 'Order Weight', the default is 90, smaller (lighter) numbers float and will be put higher in the order in the output MKV. If you want to set the changes within MakeMKV, you'll have to enter the preferences popup and set it to 'expert mode', that will enable a properties box for each track, if you select 'MKV Flags' from the dropdown box, you can add the letter 'd' to the audio track you want to be the default. If the wrong audio is being chosen by default you need to change the MKV tracks' 'default' property using MKVPropEdit or MMG's Header Editor, so that the correct track owns the flag. ![]() If you need to know what's in a subtitle track, the best way is to rip the MKV, extract the Subtitle with MKVExtract and load it into Subextractor or similar. You can set up MakeMKV to get VLC to play a Blu Ray, or you can just watch the output MKV, the ONLY way to know what each audio track contains is to listen to it.
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