Xvid settings for animated movies?

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  • carlosesteban
    Junior Member
    Junior Member
    • Aug 2003
    • 23

    Xvid settings for animated movies?

    Hi, i've heard Xvid is way better than DivX when it comes to animated movies. I want to try it out, but i'm totally new to Xvid... What settings do you recommend me to encode animated movies with Xvid?
    My old system:

    Sony Vaio PCG-FX502
    AMD Duron at 1GHz, 256MB RAM
    VIA KT133A Motherboard
    ATI RAGE 8MB VRAM
  • carlosesteban
    Junior Member
    Junior Member
    • Aug 2003
    • 23

    #2
    Oh, i forgot, i heard Xvid takes better care of the high contrast edges in animated movies. DivX seems to create a lot of noise in those regions. That's the main reason why i want to find out how to set the Xvid codec particularly for animation.
    Thanks
    My old system:

    Sony Vaio PCG-FX502
    AMD Duron at 1GHz, 256MB RAM
    VIA KT133A Motherboard
    ATI RAGE 8MB VRAM

    Comment

    • shiny#3
      Digital Video Master
      Digital Video Master
      • Jul 2003
      • 1000

      #3
      Hi,

      you are right about your statment with xvid.

      here is a little page that might be of some help for your xvid settings.

      good luck!

      Comment

      • Mosthated
        Member
        Member
        • Jul 2002
        • 59

        #4
        Does this mean that XviD sharpens up the edges. Because for converting Southpark that would really be nice.

        Comment

        • carlosesteban
          Junior Member
          Junior Member
          • Aug 2003
          • 23

          #5
          Thank you shiny I'll try it out.
          My old system:

          Sony Vaio PCG-FX502
          AMD Duron at 1GHz, 256MB RAM
          VIA KT133A Motherboard
          ATI RAGE 8MB VRAM

          Comment

          • shiny#3
            Digital Video Master
            Digital Video Master
            • Jul 2003
            • 1000

            #6
            to mosthated:

            I just don´t know if xvid codec is the best choice of mpeg 4 based
            codecs for the use with anime movies. I just stepped
            over it about 8 months ago when I was looking for an alternative
            to DIVX since I met a lot of unwanted results when messing with the DIVX codec settings. (maybe I was to dumb to grab the whole
            settings-->result issues back then.)

            to sum it up... I found the Xvid setting gui somehow easier to
            deal with.

            the site I have mentioned above does mostly represent (not in every point) the experiences I have gathered when dealing with
            Clerks the animated series, that have very sharp edges.

            I have also to admit that I am not really up to date with Divx
            pro 5.05 . just using it to decode my movies that I "brought from
            my vacation". Maybe Divx 5.05 has improved a lot!!

            but since I bought the Denver DVD-176 , which swallows almost all
            kind of crap that somehow has something to do with an Mpeg 2
            format no matter if burned on cdr DVD-r as video cd svideo cd or reauthored dvd or even as iso -data cd , dvd, I focused on the CCE.

            it surley is the fact that I have missed the newest developments on DIVX PRO.

            just ask UNCAS if you want to use this. he surley has more expertise with that.

            good luck!

            Comment

            • Mosthated
              Member
              Member
              • Jul 2002
              • 59

              #7
              Thnx for your reply!

              My situation is just a bit different. I have a crappy JVC DVD player which doensn't 'eat' as much as yours does. that's why I encode using TMPGenc. It's too bad that TMPGenc (at least the things I know) does not encode XviD. Still, I'm interested in XviD because I heard about this advantages. Yet I don't know if it's really better than XviD. Thnx for your reply!! Greetz. Mosthated

              Comment

              • carlosesteban
                Junior Member
                Junior Member
                • Aug 2003
                • 23

                #8
                One Question:

                I tried enconding a movie with 2 passes of Xvid, like that guide you recommended me explained... Is it normal that the first pass produces a HUGE file, something like 1,4GB or so?

                Thanx
                My old system:

                Sony Vaio PCG-FX502
                AMD Duron at 1GHz, 256MB RAM
                VIA KT133A Motherboard
                ATI RAGE 8MB VRAM

                Comment

                • carlosesteban
                  Junior Member
                  Junior Member
                  • Aug 2003
                  • 23

                  #9
                  BTW: the final product, that means after the second pass, was normal, the 600MB i wanted... but the middle file was more than twice that size!
                  My old system:

                  Sony Vaio PCG-FX502
                  AMD Duron at 1GHz, 256MB RAM
                  VIA KT133A Motherboard
                  ATI RAGE 8MB VRAM

                  Comment

                  • shiny#3
                    Digital Video Master
                    Digital Video Master
                    • Jul 2003
                    • 1000

                    #10
                    the first pass is that big because it is encoded in high bitrate
                    to ensure that "fast moving scenes" are provided with a bitrate
                    high enough to be displayed properly. the second pass selectivly applies
                    bitratevalues according to the requirements of the scenes.

                    that means slow moving scenes --> low bitrate ;
                    fast moving scenes --> high bitrate;

                    the first pass is no longer needed when the jobis done!!

                    have you been content with the result???

                    to mosthated:
                    have you tried to install the ffdshow filter for decoding xvid,
                    to serve Tmpeg??

                    you could also try the CCE basic to encode to mpeg!!!

                    Comment

                    • carlosesteban
                      Junior Member
                      Junior Member
                      • Aug 2003
                      • 23

                      #11
                      Xvid did work better But i think it still needs a little filtering to look its best.

                      Thank you
                      My old system:

                      Sony Vaio PCG-FX502
                      AMD Duron at 1GHz, 256MB RAM
                      VIA KT133A Motherboard
                      ATI RAGE 8MB VRAM

                      Comment

                      • SpikeSpiegel
                        Gold Member
                        Gold Member
                        • Apr 2003
                        • 141

                        #12
                        I agree with what u said about the forming of noise in hi contrast pictures using divx.
                        But I also agree with “Maybe Divx 5.05 has improved a lot!!”
                        The noise was a great problem of DivX4LowMotion, then, with the “dual pass” of 5.0x versions, this annoying effect decreased and with 5.05 it almost disappeared.
                        I did some tests converting anime videos with Xvid (Koepi’s 24062003-1 alpha release) and DivX5.05Pro using DVX with Lanczos resize method and without filters.
                        After the encoding I extracted some frames and these are the results:
                        1)noise: even using medium-hi bitrate (1000k and then 1350k with res=515*384, in other words 0.21-0.28 bitrate/pixel per frame) there’s a little noise in each file, that’s because there’s a lot of motion.
                        The difference between divx&xvid encoded files isn’t noticeable.
                        2)macroblock: using xvid, all hi motion scenes are full of macroblocks, using divx I noticed macrobloks only in the 1000k file and only in a few (the most “critical”) scenes.

                        Comment

                        • SpikeSpiegel
                          Gold Member
                          Gold Member
                          • Apr 2003
                          • 141

                          #13
                          I think that the real difference between the two codecs is that the dual pass of DivX is more precise in the motion search and in the allocation of data, so u can use it even with low bitrates.
                          Maybe, using VERY high bitrate values, Xvid is closer than DivX to the real perfection.

                          P.s. if u wanna do some tests make sure that, in the divX configuration, those options are NOT enabled:
                          Resize-crop&deinterlace via codec, Psychovisual Enc., Postprocessing Source, Quarter Pixel (increases the noise) and GMC.
                          If u’re gonna use high bitrate, disable even “Choose your profile”.

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