OK I encoded a 3 minute clip last night in both TMPEnc to .m2v and WMV9 encoder to .WMV. I used VBR 6000Kbps average bit rate for video in .WMV and VBR 8000Kbps in TMPEnc. Otherwise the default settings for the most part, except that I kep the video size locked to my source for .WMV (instead of letting it go to the bigger size it seemed to be heading based on one of the dialogs).
Resulting file sizes are roughly the same (source was 650Meg, .WMV was 150Meg and .m2v was 170Meg). I'd say the .m2v file quality visually was superior. The .WMV file had some odd horizontal artifacts (like misaligned scanlines), for instance when paused every other line was slightly out of sync with where it should be given its neighbors. Maybe I could fix this with some hardcore investigation of the interlacing settings, but as my source material is pretty standard I wouldn't think I'd have to do that.
I'm just encoding a DV_AVI file captured straight from my DV camcorder. I am wanting to archive my home movies, and was planning to go with .WMV9 probably except that with file sizes not much less than standard .MPEG2 and quality that isn't as good (at least not without getting crazy with low level manipulations) now I don't know.
I was really expecting the .WMV file to come out significantly smaller and still be almost as good quality. I used what seemed to be a pretty high quality setting (at least, it took 30 minutes to encode my 3 minute clip!) and I also kept the image size locked to that of my source material (rather than lettin WMV9 make it bigger as it seemed to want to do).
Can anybody explain how/why .WMV9 can make a relatively similar quality playable video file to MPEG2(4?) at a savings in file size that makes it worth using as a codec? Ideally I'd like to be able to get 2 hours of high quality video on a single 4.7G DVD.
Also, one other question. After the first pass in WMV9 the file size was like 60Meg or so. Since it was on the second pass I was assuming the file size wouldn't change much from that (presumably it was just improving some things here and there). When finished with the second pass however the file was 150Meg! Why would the second pass add so much to the file size?
Thanks!
Resulting file sizes are roughly the same (source was 650Meg, .WMV was 150Meg and .m2v was 170Meg). I'd say the .m2v file quality visually was superior. The .WMV file had some odd horizontal artifacts (like misaligned scanlines), for instance when paused every other line was slightly out of sync with where it should be given its neighbors. Maybe I could fix this with some hardcore investigation of the interlacing settings, but as my source material is pretty standard I wouldn't think I'd have to do that.
I'm just encoding a DV_AVI file captured straight from my DV camcorder. I am wanting to archive my home movies, and was planning to go with .WMV9 probably except that with file sizes not much less than standard .MPEG2 and quality that isn't as good (at least not without getting crazy with low level manipulations) now I don't know.
I was really expecting the .WMV file to come out significantly smaller and still be almost as good quality. I used what seemed to be a pretty high quality setting (at least, it took 30 minutes to encode my 3 minute clip!) and I also kept the image size locked to that of my source material (rather than lettin WMV9 make it bigger as it seemed to want to do).
Can anybody explain how/why .WMV9 can make a relatively similar quality playable video file to MPEG2(4?) at a savings in file size that makes it worth using as a codec? Ideally I'd like to be able to get 2 hours of high quality video on a single 4.7G DVD.
Also, one other question. After the first pass in WMV9 the file size was like 60Meg or so. Since it was on the second pass I was assuming the file size wouldn't change much from that (presumably it was just improving some things here and there). When finished with the second pass however the file was 150Meg! Why would the second pass add so much to the file size?
Thanks!
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