


The switch I got from Amazon, and had no EDID settings on it, it just worked.

SO if you get such an HDMI switch with dolby out, you wont have to mess with PC drivers ( switch handles the sound output, not the TV) To get Dolby 5.1, I plug the firestick into an HDMI switch that has Dolby output, so the switch tells the stick to send Dolby 5.1 surround sound. Sample rates: 32 kHz, 88.2 kHz, 176.Hi guys i was just wondering would this work with a AMD GPU as well i have seen NVIDIA and Intel but no mention of AMD?If the AMD GPU board has Dolby 5.1 sound, then yes, and I am sure it does.Īnd to make it clear about a Firestick and Dolby output, it has the same problem plugged straight into a stereo only HDTV, the TV reports to the firestick it can only play stereo, so the firestick only sends it stereo.Note: The following formats are not commonly used, and consequently are not supported by the audio driver: When this happens, the NVIDIA HD audio driver defaults to the following format:īeginning with the NVIDIA graphics driver version 352.86 (HD audio driver version 1.3.34.3), the driver defaults to the following supported formats whenever it receives invalid data for the formats supported by the display: The problem occurs when the system reports invalid data for the audio formats supported by the display. Speaker configurations: Stereo, quadrophonic, 5.1, 7.1.Sampling rates: 44.1 kHz, 48 kHz, 96 kHz, 192 kHz.The NVIDIA HD audio driver is capable of supporting the following audio formats: All the NVIDIA HD audio codecs since the GT212 GPU support sampling rates of 32 kHz - 192 kHz, sample sizes of 16 bit - 24 bit, and speaker configurations from stereo to 7.1. The audio formats that appear in the Windows Sound control panel depend on the formats supported by the audio codec, the audio driver, and also the capabilities of the display being used.
