F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems You replaced your Blu-ray discs with AC3 streaming audio, but it might not have been the best choice.

You replaced your Blu-ray discs with AC3 streaming audio, but it might not have been the best choice.

You replaced your Blu-ray discs with AC3 streaming audio, but it might not have been the best choice.

A
AskedRumble52
Member
216
11-03-2025, 10:12 PM
#1
I completed downloading every Game of Thrones season on Blu-ray. After checking discussions online, it seems that using AC3 pass-through works well for audio quality. Recent forum posts suggest some Blu-rays may not support surround sound when paired with AC3. This could be a misunderstanding—most modern players handle it fine. If you want the best experience, stick with your current settings unless you notice issues.
A
AskedRumble52
11-03-2025, 10:12 PM #1

I completed downloading every Game of Thrones season on Blu-ray. After checking discussions online, it seems that using AC3 pass-through works well for audio quality. Recent forum posts suggest some Blu-rays may not support surround sound when paired with AC3. This could be a misunderstanding—most modern players handle it fine. If you want the best experience, stick with your current settings unless you notice issues.

M
MeteowS
Junior Member
12
11-04-2025, 12:13 AM
#2
AC3 is the format, passthrough refers to sending video back without decoding audio, meaning it goes through another device for playback. You must send it to a player that supports AC3. Codecs are affected by file size; for example, DTS (PCM) can be large at high bitrates (around 1.5–2Mbps). I favor keeping audio in DTS/DTT and removing extra tracks so only the English version remains.
M
MeteowS
11-04-2025, 12:13 AM #2

AC3 is the format, passthrough refers to sending video back without decoding audio, meaning it goes through another device for playback. You must send it to a player that supports AC3. Codecs are affected by file size; for example, DTS (PCM) can be large at high bitrates (around 1.5–2Mbps). I favor keeping audio in DTS/DTT and removing extra tracks so only the English version remains.

P
pooploser93
Junior Member
19
11-04-2025, 06:10 AM
#3
Interesting to explore.
P
pooploser93
11-04-2025, 06:10 AM #3

Interesting to explore.

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EnderSponge_
Member
225
11-05-2025, 08:53 AM
#4
The majority of media players accept the AC3 codec, but alternatives may offer superior audio quality.
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EnderSponge_
11-05-2025, 08:53 AM #4

The majority of media players accept the AC3 codec, but alternatives may offer superior audio quality.

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Goljat12
Member
213
11-10-2025, 01:09 AM
#5
I usually keep audio and video unchanged when I extract Blu-rays. MakeMKV works well for me, just delete non-English tracks and all subtitles except the mandatory English ones. A standard rip can reach 20-30GB without encoding, though encoding may influence picture quality.
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Goljat12
11-10-2025, 01:09 AM #5

I usually keep audio and video unchanged when I extract Blu-rays. MakeMKV works well for me, just delete non-English tracks and all subtitles except the mandatory English ones. A standard rip can reach 20-30GB without encoding, though encoding may influence picture quality.