Examples of Jitter Removed from videos
11 Attachment(s)
This was not easy. Let's just get that part straight right away.
It was time-intensive too. I probably spent 5 hours testing the settings. The video themselves took about 30 hours worth of encoding time total per episode, and there were about 4-5 encode passes (each one had different settings, to attack part of the problem). These two videos were suffering different problems. The first one (16) was a more basic issue. The second one (20) was faced with compounded problems. I removed 100% of the jitter from 16 and about 75% from 20. MPEG files are attached. You can burn these to a DVD-RW or DVD+RW to view on a television set. (Author them first, of course -- just make a quick dummy menu, add all 4 videos). Preview the videos in your web browser! To watch the videos live, you'll need to click the following links. You may also be asked to reload the page.
Ideally jitter is prevented at the analog level, using the earliest generation recordings possible. The way you do this is to use a good VCR and a separate TBC. I actually have a good TBC and VCR, and the tapes were early generation, borrowed from a friend. But these were in shabby condition even on the tapes, even after analog filtering. If you're not sure what to do with these ZIP or RAR files, then read this help post. |
Why not start online course. Smurf 101 :P
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Dukes 16 BEFORE:
"Reload page to view video." |
Dukes 16 AFTER:
"Reload page to view video." |
Dukes 20 BEFORE:
"Reload page to view video." |
Dukes 20 AFTER:
"Reload page to view video." |
Thread updated with new samples, re-attached old MPEGs. :)
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