Onkyo TX 696 Service Manual

12/26/01
Model: TX-DS595, TX-DS696, TX-DS797, and TX-DS898
Problem:
Intermittent sound dropout:
Solution: None (Please read information below)
Some very recent release DVD movies such as Pearl Harbor and Jurassic Park III may not play through the above listed model receivers when set for Dolby Digital 5.1. The units will work fine with DTS settings. Both settings are accessible through the DVD software menu, under language or Audio setup function. By selecting the hardware of firmware solution given at this time.
Various companies are studying the issue of compatibility regarding Dolby Digital Extended Bitstream Encoded materials and as soon as final technical solution is found, we will up date you.
Further technical description is being provided below:
mode this problem can be avoided. There is no
DTS
Audio Dropout Problem
Some DVD content (e.g., “Pearl Harbor”, “Jurassic Park III”) is not able to play properly on some decoder products, while it plays correctly on others. For those systems that are affected, the decoder exhibits frequent or even continuous audio dropouts.
1. Audio dropouts only occur in decoder products if the following conditions are met:
a) The decoder product must have enabled a specific interrupt in the DSP Semiconductor IC. b) The decoder product must react to this interrupt in a way so as to cause audio dropouts.
In addition, this problem is only encountered if the decoder product is decoding a particular type of Dolby Digital bitstream:
a) The bitstream must have been encoded with the latest version code in the DP569 encoder. b) The encoder must have been configured with the "Extended Bitstream Parameters"
2. There is a possible solutions to eliminate this problem, namely:
a) Chan ge the way Dolby Digital bitstreams are made to avoid triggering the interrupt.
3. These steps are already in process:
feature enabled.
a) Dolby is preparing a firmware update for the DP569 encoder, which will allow encoding of bitstreams
using the “Extended Bitstream Parameters” feature that do not trigger this interrupt. This firmware revision will be available in early January 2002 for DP569 customers.
b) In the meantime, Dolby has advised key content producers of the situation, and suggested that they
disable the “Extended Bitstream Parameters” feature for any new content that they are mastering.
4. Dolby's DP569 encoder is currently the only encoder product to support the “Extended Bitstream Parameters” feature. The current firmware is operating correctly relative to the Dolby Digital bitstream specification.
5. Several recent DVD releases, including “Pearl Harbor” and “Jurassic Park III”, have been mastered using the DP569 with “Extended Bitstream Parameters” enabled.
Technical Description of the Problem
The DSP provides an audio configuration change function, which may be used to inform the host that one or more audio configuration parameters have changed in the incoming coded bitstream. In some products, audio configuration parameter changes are used to trigger short mutes, so that the consumer does not hear audible glitches during configuration changes.
Decoder products using such IC's can detect audi o configuration changes in two ways :
1. During decoding, the DSP in use provides access to many bitstream parameters. By using a “Solicited
Read Message” protocol, the host can read the current values of any or all of these parameters, and manually detect configuration changes.
2. The DSP may also offer an “Unsolicited Read Message” feature, whereby the host can be automatically
informed (via software interrupts) of changes in the audio configuration parameters. In order for this function to be active, the host must enable the “Audio Config Change Notification Enable” feature in the DSP IC.
If the “Audio Config Change Notification Enable” feature is enabled, the host will receive a software interrupt whenever any of the audio configuration parameters change. The specific list of Dolby Digital parameters that trigger this interrupt depends upon the version of the DSP. In the latest firmware version, the parameters that trigger the interrupt are:
acmod, bsid, lfeon, dsurmod, dialnorm, and timecod2.
The timecod2 parameter was added to this list in order to represent the Dolby Surround EX mode flag, dsurexmod. According to the Dolby Digital “Annex D” specification, dsurexmod is carried in the two most significant bits of the
timecod2 parameter (assuming the bsid parameter is set to 0x6). However, other fields are also carried in the timecod2 parameter as well. In particular, the least significant bit of this parameter is used to carry the Encoder
Information parameter, encinfo.
In practice, the dsurexmod parameter should not change over the course of a particular program. However, the encinfo parameter was designed to change frequently from one frame to the next. In typical content that has been mastered using the “Extended Bitstream Parameters” functions, the encinfo parameter will change state every two to three frames.
As a result of these frequent changes in the encinfo parameter, if the “Audio Config Change Notification Enable” feature is enabled in the DSP IC, the host will receive very frequent change notification interrupts. These frequent interrupts may cause problems in two ways:
1. If the host is designed to mute during audio configuration change events, t he result will be frequent audio
dropouts. If the duration of the mute is longer than a few audio frames, then these audio dropouts may be continuous.
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