Quote:
Else, no it is not important WHEN YOU ARE AWARE OF THE PROBLEM ! That is the purpose of the forum also, to warn people. Because manual D2S never mention it needs so much space. EDIT: and I hadn't see Zyphon's post yet ;-) Note: Zyphon you can still work from the DVD with AnyDVD installed but it is not recommanded (for your drive safe). |
Quote:
check "no images" in cd image tab. open the notepad and write: @ rem save as "RunBBMPEG.bat" and put in the bbmpeg folder under d2s choose that "RunBBMPEG.bat" in the multiplexer tab. check "don't delete any files" in misc. tab. encode as normal(choose the kvcd notch) you will get: 6-8Gb for the source ripp 4.37 GB for the video and audio elementary streams you will need less then 13gb do do the whole job :!: :arrow: here you can delete the 6-8Gb for the source ripp! after the CCE encode take the encoded video file(or puldown encoded file ntsc).mpv and the .ac3 and author in tmpgencdvdauthor(or other authoring program) |
Quote:
I also forgot this part in my list posted above and that give a total of 34 GB if you let D2SRoba works alone. |
Quote:
6-8Gb for the source ripp , 4.37 GB for the video and audio elementary streams and plus 4 gb if you used pulldown ....then needed round 16.5Gb! |
long time no see my friend...
where u been jorel :lol: :?: |
Quote:
As it happens I did have to buy AnyDVD because ages ago I purchased CloneDVD to back up my DVD's until I turned to DVDShrink. Hopefully now though Sansgrip tool will eliminate both. :D |
Hey Guys.
Now, I've made a DVD with a res. of 352x576 in 16:9 but the DVD-Player doesn't read this flag and there aren't any borders. First I have put the Video, after patching in 4:3 because TMPGEnc DVD Author can't read this res. in 16:9, and after authoring I repatched the files to 16:9. But Now, the DVD-Player see it as a 4:3 movie. What I've done wrong? Hope you can help. Or isn't a res of 352x576 anamorph compatible? |
Quote:
It's out of DVD specs. You must encode 4:3 -kwag |
I've one another question to the spec.
At the moment I encode with HC Encoder and want to use only one B-Frame because the quality is a little bit better and this gives me more compression. In the past, I also make my ONE-CD-Encodes with TMPGEnc with only one B-Frame and the results are very, very good and this SVCDs and VCDs were played very well on my SAP. Now, my question: Are one B-Frames allowed in a DVD-Stream? Or is the only limitation the lengh of a GOP? Hope you can help me. |
I don't see any reason why it wouldn't be compliant.
|
I can't see how setting 1 B frame can compress more than setting 2 B frames :roll:
-kwag |
Like in the PM. In my tests 1-B-Frame gives me more compression and it looks in high motion scenes better as 2-B-Frames. But I test again and post my results.
But you say it's dvd-compliant? |
Another test with HCE and CQ:
1-B-Frame(s) - 85.671Kb; ~0,49x% more compression 2-B-Frame(s) - 86.177Kb; 1-B-Frame(s) - 100.434Kb; ~0,79x% more compression 2-B-Frame(s) - 101.222Kb; Today, I post also my results with TMPGEnc's CQ mode. |
What is the actual GOP structure in all those cases? VirtualDubMod will show it properly.
|
Quote:
It's a GOP of 15 Frames and in one example 2 B-Frames between the Ps and one with only one B-Frame between the P's, or what you mean? |
Exactly. What it is like in the encoded file - is it really IPBPBPB... or something else?
|
Yes, it is.
IPBPBPBPBPBPBPB is my GOP and have more compression then the same with 2 B-Frames. I've tested it also with TMPGEnc again and it is more then 2% more compression. But I have a problem with my TMPGEnc, hope you can help and test it on your systems. If I set my GOP to "1-5-1-1-15" I only get a GOP of 12 8O If I set my GOP to "1-14-1-1-15" Then I get a GOP of 16 8O I can't get a GOP of 15 with TMPGenc 2.520.xx. Only I set to "1-16-1-1-16" and then switch ClosedGOPs on then I get 15 Frames. :oops: Do you have the same Problems with 15 Frames? With 18 it works. EDIT: With 1-B-Frame only (sorry don't know the word) values like 12, 14, or 18 are possible. With 2-B's only 13, 15, 17 etc. are possible. With the option closed GOP all values are possible. |
Quote:
If you do a 2-pass encode, which guarantees an accurate file size, you'll see that at lower bitrates the 2 B frames clip will look far better that 1 B frame. As you go higher in bitrate, the opposite occurs, and you'll get a sharper picture with less B frames. If you can afford even higher bitrates (>~10Mbps), IP GOP will be better than IBBP, and if you can afford >~50Mbps, then I frame only GOP is the best :D You're obviously using CQ mode, and the encoder will compensate for frame (GOP) length. Quote:
-kwag |
For me my 1-B-Frame encodes looks great and they have less blocks then the 2-B-Frames. They looks also better in high motion scenes because there is 1-B-Frame better.
Here some pic from my TMPGEnc test with 1, 2 and 3-B-Frames: http://www.digitalfaq.com/archives/i.../2005/05/5.jpg The GOP are: 1-20-3-1-0 1-27-2-1-0 and 1-41-1-1-0 (from inc.) The compression of one b-Frame is much better. EDIT: Quote:
EDIT: Quote:
|
Site design, images and content © 2002-2024 The Digital FAQ, www.digitalFAQ.com
Forum Software by vBulletin · Copyright © 2024 Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.