Classe Audio Surround Sound Processor SSP-800 Manual De Usuario

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Understanding Surround Sound
Today’s sophisticated surround sound systems have spawned a bewildering 
array of technologies and acronyms. In this section, we’ll give you a basic 
understanding of what all that jargon means. As a result, you’ll be better 
equipped to take advantage of the best that home entertainment has to off er.
how many channels? Today’s home entertainment systems reproduce soundtracks that include 
anything from one to eight separate channels of information. Examples include:
•  Watching mono movies, such as Casablanca or Th
 e Wizard of 
Oz, having only a single channel of audio information in the 
soundtrack.
•  Listening to a musical CD, which is typically stereo or 2-channel 
sound.
•  Watching the original Star Wars in the original Dolby Surround 
Pro Logic format, which is four channels of information derived 
from two channels.
•  Watching a recent movie or T.V. show in a 5.1-channel or 
7.1-channel surround format, which identifi es that the source 
material has either fi ve or seven full-range signals for the front, 
surround, and rear speakers plus the .1 signal for the Low 
Frequency Eff ects (LFE), also referred to as the LFE channel, for 
the subwoofer.
Your SSP-800 handles all of these tasks with ease, switching to an appropriate 
processing mode automatically upon sensing the nature of the incoming signal.
However, you may still have to select from the available choices. For example, 
disc-based media often contains multiple soundtracks with varying numbers of 
channels and even diff erent languages. Because you may have to choose the one 
you want to hear using the menu of the media itself, you should know what 
jargon you’ll likely see.
matrix or discrete? When movie-makers fi rst wanted to expand beyond simple stereo (left and right 
audio channels), they had a problem - the entire infrastructure on which they 
depended was stereo.
Dolby Laboratories solved that problem with a system called Dolby
®
 Surround 
that embedded two extra channels of audio sound into the existing stereo pair 
so that specialized circuitry could retrieve the extra information with reasonable 
accuracy. Th
  is technique, whereby channels are mixed together with the 
intention of separating them later, is called matrix encoding and decoding.
Th
  e disadvantage, as you might expect, is that it is diffi
  cult to completely and 
perfectly separate two channels that have been mixed together.