In the Blu-ray Disc specification, Dolby TrueHD tracks may carry up to 8 discrete
audio channels (
7.1 surround) of 24-bit audio at 96 kHz, or up to 6 channels (
5.1 surround) at . The maximum
bitrate of an audio stream including metadata is (instantaneous, since it is variable bitrate), and a TrueHD frame is either 1/1200 seconds long (for 48000, 96000 or 192000 Hz) or 1/1102.5 seconds long (for 44100, 88200 or 176400 Hz). Any Blu-ray player or
AV receiver that can decode TrueHD can also downmix a multi-channel TrueHD track into any smaller amount of channels for final playback (for example, a 7.1 track to a 5.1 output, or a 5.1 track to a
stereo output) by merging discrete channels' signals (except the
low-frequency effects channel, the ".1," in a stereo mixdown, which is discarded due to its sound not playing back well without a dedicated
subwoofer). Dolby TrueHD is an optional codec, which means that Blu-ray hardware may decode it, but also may not (for example, inexpensive or early players, Blu-ray computer software, or pre–Blu-ray AV receivers). Consequently, all Blu-rays that include Dolby TrueHD audio also include a fail-safe track of
Dolby Digital (AC-3), a mandatory codec. Unlike the competing
DTS-HD Master Audio, which encodes its primary (optional) track in terms of differences from the companion mandatory track, a Dolby TrueHD-equipped Blu-ray's primary and companion tracks are redundant; the Dolby TrueHD bitstream has no data in common with the AC-3 bitstream, but AC-3 is used to construct E-AC3 stream. Similar to DTS-HD MA, however, Dolby TrueHD's dual tracks are opaque to the user; a Blu-ray player loaded with a Dolby TrueHD disc will automatically fall back to AC-3 if it cannot decode or pass through the lossless bitstream, with no explicit selection required (or offered). Dolby TrueHD's prominence relative to DTS-HD MA began to decline around 2010. It has experienced a mild resurgence as the encoding used for
Dolby Atmos audio (especially in
Ultra HD Blu-ray titles), and
Crunchyroll still use Dolby TrueHD for their non-Atmos releases.
Universal Pictures Home Entertainment has recently used Dolby TrueHD on occasion. ==Transport==