

So that's a big drawback of even storing the videos as dual stream MKVs for the time being (although I have no reason to try to play non-DV MKV's directly on the LG.only DV files make sense). Except the LG, it says it can't play this type of file, whereas it plays the single stream MKV fine, and the MP4 with dual stream DV. Everything plays it just like the regular MKV from MakeMKV with a single stream, using the HDR10 video. I tried using MKVToolNix to remux the two video streams from the MP4 into an MKV with the original TrueHD/Atmos track, which worked as expected. It's showing up in MKVToolNix with a different name than the original m2ts's second stream, but it's otherwise the same as far as I can tell. The entire process took me an hour to figure out, but once I did it, I sold my Xbox One X, because I'm now using my LG USB to play Dolby Vision MP4's! Hopefully this starts a discussion. It sounds like its complicated, but it isn't. *Right now we are limited to only MP4 and AC3 audio.

Mp4muxer -dv-profile 7 -input-file (baselayername.hevc1) -input-file (dvlayername.hevc2) -input-file (audio.ac3) -media-lang eng -output-file (nameofmovie).mp4 Run Dolby Vision MP4Muxer ( )ĭolbyVision MP4 Muxer only works in Command Prompt so you have to navigate to the corresponding folders where the files are and type Once you have HEVC1, HEVC2, and the Audio track. This is a hard line limitation- you need to use AC3!!!ģ. Audio track which you will have to convert to AC3. HEVC 2 in 1080p (this is the dolby vision enhancement layer)Ĭ. Find the correct M2TS file and demux the following files:ī. I will be buying Gladiator this weekend to test out though.Ģ. I have only tested this with Black Panther since that's the only one I own. I made this thread in the hopes we can figure out a way to reconvert this into MKV. So apparently there's a method to backup UHD ISO's into MP4's that triggers Dolby Vision on an LG or Vizio television app via USB.
