Which is better for encoding about 90 min Video on 700MB disc, for the BEST quality possbile. I have tried Xvid, Divx 3, 4 and 5. Iv also tried nandub SBC, i just cant seem to get the quality
Quality?
Collapse
X
-
Are u using multiple passes?
Maybe the video source has a large resolution, have u tried resizing the video?
Interlaced movies dont tend to compress very well, if ur movie is interlaced, deinterlace it, or better yet, inverse telecine it so it runs at 23.976 fps instead of 29.97 so u use a higher bitrate cos of less fps. -
It depends on what you encode!!!
for a natural picture Xvid and Divx 5.05 are almost equal.
for anime movies I prefer the Xvid codec, but that is a matter of
taste.
make sure that you use multipass encoding and that you set
the processing parameters in the codecs to slowest (best quality)
in Divx an Ultra high in Xvid codec.Comment
-
I guess the minority report is a lot more than 90 minutes
depending on the processor you use ... you should use the provided optimizations ....that also means of course if your fpu is best let the fpu calculate.
for a good guide on how to convert a dvd to mpeg4 standart
I suggest reading this guide
for best compatibility with standalone divx players i suggest that you use the avi container method that is also explained in this guide!!!Last edited by shiny#3; 29 Aug 2003, 04:32 AM.Comment
-
ok here are some xvid settings for sharpest edges
and most detailed display.....these settigs are normally used for animes, but changing the blur a little bit may also serve you well...http://www.animemusicvideos.org/guides/avtech/xvid.html
good luck!!Comment
-
jimhaddon,
1. What resolution are you encoding the movie at?
2. Are you using 1-pass or 2-pass encoding mode?
3. Try smoothing the video a little. It helps to soften noise and makes the source more compressible.
p.s. Stick with either XviD or DivX 5. Both are better than DivX 3.11 (alias SBC, when used under nandub) when it comes to 'normal' (non-animated) movies.Comment
Comment