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How to burn a cd in wavelab 6
How to burn a cd in wavelab 6




  1. #How to burn a cd in wavelab 6 pro#
  2. #How to burn a cd in wavelab 6 plus#

I know what I would rather buy.Ĭopying any existing DVDA will work unless the disc is watermarked, at which point you're screwed unless your player does not honour the watermark - and most do. Sonic can be picked up second user (license transfer is $25) for the cost of Chrome new. Sonic has an LE version that is frankly pointless (no MLP support, one group etc) so avoid that. There are 2 apps that support MLP - Chrome & Sonic. This is a standalone encoder sold by either SurCode ($2500), Meridian Audio (£2,000) or Dolby Labs (Mac OS X Only, and a stonking $10,000 for the Dolby Media Producer kit although I think you might just be able to get the encoder for "only" $4500). You can - and should, IMHO, run a very steep slope LPF set to 23KHz on any transfer to analogue from SACD, giving you a resolution of 24/48 max.įor that, WaveLab or Cirlinca will do just fine. MLP Encoder & Chrome are $5,000 for the pair at retail, although a deal may be possible.Ģ4/48 is not a problem, and to be blunt from SACD might even be preferable as there is absolutely nothing above 23KHz of audio on any SACD - all that exists above that value is noise, and lots of it. So - if you can say what you're wanting to do, we can certainly point you in the right direction.ĭepending on the channel count & resolution, things will differ.Ĭlick to expand.You won't be able to do it for anything close to $500 legally. Sounds hassle but is by far the best approach as it allows multiple re-usage of the same audio files which can be a great advantage in certain circumstances.ĭVDA authoring can be as simple or as complex as you want it to be, and is well worth learning to do (and this is the place to get help with all applications, as there are folks here who know each application so will be able to help you through the initial maze). Sonic is the most complex, as it requires specifically named files in a pre determined (and utterly inflexible) project structure to work because it operates using XML files only as pointers to previously imported content. Steinberg's WaveLab does a good job and allows custom screens, but it's approach is odd & requires practise to get to grips with the way it handles things (you need to create an Audio Montage for each group of tracks on a DVDA) where Chrome is simple drag & drop operation. Either of these apps will do commercial grade discs.

#How to burn a cd in wavelab 6 plus#

Plus of course you'll also need the MLP encoder.

#How to burn a cd in wavelab 6 pro#

I personally think Cirlinca's DVD-Audio Solo Pro is a superb piece of software for the money as well.įor MLP support, you are effectively limited to either DiscWelder Chrome or Sonic's DVD-Audio Creator. For a basic title, using generated screens & no custom menus, DiscWelder Bronze will work just fine. What you will need to create the discs also depends on just what you are looking to do with them. If they are 24/48 in 5.1 or 24/96 Quad, you don't need MLP. There are players that will have no trouble at all playing these but a lot that won't either.

how to burn a cd in wavelab 6

If they are 5.1 24/96, then use of MLP is mandatory because of the total allowable bitrate for DVD-A being 9,600kbps (or 9.6Mb/s) and 24/96 PCM at 5.1 will be around 13,500 kbps.

how to burn a cd in wavelab 6

Click to expand.Depending on the channel count & resolution, things will differ.






How to burn a cd in wavelab 6