2014-02-12 Niels Möller <[email protected]>:
> The XLL headers include some information about the original
> sample size (e.g, 20 vs 24 bits, where I guess 24 is the most
> common case), and I think the decoder is supposed to
> generate an output file with the same sample size. Not sure
> if that distinction is present in FLAC.

I don't remember right now whether 20bit is really supported by
the headers. In any case, I've never ever seen such a file yet.
All the Blu-Ray files are either 16bit or 24bit. Both bitdepths are
very common. According to eac3to, some 24bit files have the
lower 4bit zeroed out, so they are really 20bit, but they are
encoded as 24bit.

The WAV header has no more information than the FLAC header.
So I've simply converted those XLL files to FLAC and uploaded
them here, together with a log of eac3to's DTS header parser
for each file:

http://madshi.net/MasterAudio.rar

Please let me know when you've downloaded this, so I can
delete it again.

Best regards, Mathias.
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