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DVD, Yes. 96kHz, No! | Stereophile.com

    https://www.stereophile.com/asweseeit/397awsi/index.html
    Publicly, Toshiba states that the audio-only DVD requires a 96kHz sampling frequency. They argue that because Dolby Digital AC-3 (the 5.1-channel discrete digital audio format chosen for DVD movies) is based on 48kHz, the audio-only DVD format must use a multiple of 48kHz.

DVD Audio players : 96Khz pcm output query !! | AVForums

    https://www.avforums.com/threads/dvd-audio-players-96khz-pcm-output-query.58457/
    A DVD-Video PCM track recorded at 96kHz sampling rate (there aren't many) may be output on the SPDIF at 96kHz and up to 24 bits if there is no copy protection flag on the disc preventing this and if the player's electronics supports this. Otherwise 48 kHz is the limit.

Ripping DTS 96khz from DVD using DVD Audio Extractor ...

    https://forums.stevehoffman.tv/threads/ripping-dts-96khz-from-dvd-using-dvd-audio-extractor.368529/
    My disc comes with a 96kHz DTS stream, but the extracted result shows as 48kHz. Why? This is a known limit. For DTS-ES and DTS-HD MA streams which come with a core stream and one or more extended streams, only the core stream (48kHz) is currently decoded by DVD Audio Extractor. And this limit only exists on DTS format.

24bit/96khz DVD-A? - VideoHelp Forum

    https://forum.videohelp.com/threads/366642-24bit-96khz-DVD-A
    DVD-A (and DVD-V) Limit = 9.8Mbps (per active audio stream). (Uncompressed/LPCM) 5.1 channels * 24 bits * 96000Hz = 11.2Mbps (too high) Lossless-compressed-PCM (aka MLP / Dolby TrueHD) is VBR and not tuneable, but in general is around 2:1 compression. That same 5.1/24/96 = 5.6Mbps (fits nicely). Nothing odd about it.

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