Quote:
Originally Posted by ramicio
Is there ANY program out there that doesn't remove overlaps? I thought I could get around it by not using eac3to, but now I see that tsmuxer is doing the same thing, which is royally SCREWING UP the audio. I don't believe overlap is a problem, and most of the time when these programs "fix" this overlap, it ends up messing up the audio. The studios obviously know what they are doing, and I doubt the set-top box players just skip audio samples, so why should these programs act any differently?
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??? As I understand it an "overlap" indicates redundant/repetitive audio packets that exist in two different streams (that are being combined). So I guess I don't understand how removing it is "royally SCREWING UP the audio"... I can tell you assuredly that failing to remove it can do so.
Please explain how the audio is being negatively affected.