![]() Personally I believe that fine tuning should be a balance between file size and quality. (684kbps 7.Optimizing or fine tuning of video encoders comes basically down to: I will try tomorrow with 8 bit settings, see how that works and report back.Īudio: English DTS AC3 Passthru. To do 10 Bit, I would need the series Nvidia1000 cards (1070, 1080, etc) and onward. ![]() Turns out that Maxwell processors on Nvidia Cards(900 series), do not support encoding on 10 bit BUT, they can do 8 bit. I tried for the past week to do 10 bit encoding with stax rip, but it was a no go. Play around with this guide and see what you come up with. I suspect though that with the right software and settings you would see your encoding times drop significantly. I'm not sure how that would change using an AMD processor. You can see the estimated encoding times, with an i7 it's around 5-6 hours. Joybell produces extremely high quality blu ray rips that are typically less than 2 gb, using x265. For x265 I would suggest the following guide: https //community/show/how-encode-staxrip-joybell-x265-hevc-10bit/ There are tutorials there for both Staxrip and Handbrake. On the other hand if you want to get the file size down as small as possible, even if it takes longer, then do x265. At 4 gb you could have a full resolution (1080p), x264 file that would look very good, as in difficult to distinguish from the original blu ray. It is true that for a given file size x265 will give higher quality, but at a certain point the difference is negligible. My advice to you is this - if all you want to do is compress your Blu Rays to less than 4 gb in the shortest time possible then do x264 encoding instead, it will be much faster than x265. I have used both Handbrake and Staxrip to do x265 encoding, personally I prefer Staxrip as it is more powerful, but it is more complicated to use. I know those qualities I am asking are a lot, but you never know.Įdit 1: I did try like 20 different settings for "preview" I found the "best one" but once I put the whole Blu ray to be done that way, the time grew exponentially from what I calculated on the "Preview" to its actual time. However, if anyone has like a "perfect" encoding settings to make it about 15 hours of encoding, plus a small size and good quality, please let me know. ![]() ![]() I've only done 3 blu rays but, so far, the quality in his 60 inch TV looked good.Īs long as he doesn't compare it to his Blu Ray (I hope), I should be ok.īut I will report later, once such comparisons (inevitably) happens. (2 pass encode)Īlso by down-scaling from 1920 to 1600, or 1440 sometimes. this produces a file, depending on the blu ray of about 3.5gb and it takes about 15 hours to encode. I managed to bring down the time to about 12 hours by putting the Avg Bitrate (kbps) to about 3-3.5k. So with H265, I am giving up time, but the file stays lower in size, so what I am basically doing is giving up, is time for size. Well, its a combination of both time and space. (I am willing to take some degradation of video) But I dont want the end result to look THAT crappy either. I dont want the file to be bigger than 4gb, as the computer I am giving him is a Dell Optiplex 380 (old) that I dont know will be able to handle higher bitrates. So as it stands, Handbrake is telling me, it will take 25 hours to encode a 2hours and 20 minutes Blu ray movie.Īre there any other recommended settings? Video: H.265(x265), Constant Quality=20 RF Preset: very slow (did this because somewhere i read it makes it a very small file.Īudio: English DTS AC3 Passthru. Picture: 1280x720 (downgrading from 1920x1080) because that seems to affect the speed a lot. Processor: AMD (FX) 4130 Quad Core Processor 3.80 ghz Motherboard: MSI 760GM-P34 FX (with latest drivers/flash) Video Card: Nvidia (EVGA GeForce GTX 960 Super Clocked ACX 2.0 4GB GDDR5 128 Bit Graphic Card (04G-P4-3962-KR) with latest drivers My uncle has like over 100 dvd's and about 40-50 Blu-rays!įirst I will give you the transcoding computer specs: After talking he asked me if I could transcode his library also to a HTPC kind of setting which I am happy to do however, I hit a wall when I started to transcode Blu-Rays. ![]() However, once in Hawaii, my uncle happens to have a somewhat large collection of BLU-Ray/DVD's. I moved to Hawaii and I used to have a very large collection of DVD's which the wife said no, to shipping from the mainland to Hawaii, so 3 years ago, I discovered and used Handbrake to rip all my moves to my hard drive and get rid of the DVD's. ![]()
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