Heya..
I use Dvd Decrypter 3, Xmpeg 4.5, and Divx 5.02. I also have divx 3.11 installed.
My first movie's ripping/encoding resulted in perfect quality. However, my next movie resulted in not so much a low-res look, but more of a washed-out look. It looks like your vision when you have a little bit of water in your eyes. The "washed-outness" doesn't mush the whole picture, just in the areas surrounding color changes (like that hazy ring that sometimes appears around the moon ). Also, chunks of pixels are constantly moving on inanimate objects, such as the background or clothing of a character. This affect also appears on black areas, such as during scene changes. None of the effects worsten with fast or slow movement.
Here are the changes from the first, perfect quality movie to the second:
- Increased bitrate from 1500 to 2000
- Interlaced, not progressive (I did not deinterlace; first movie
was progressive)
- Res is 632x356
- In Xmpeg, under "Post Processing," the original ratio was 4:3. I changed this to 16:9 (wasn't sure if this would affect the outcome)
- Since I'm a newb, I'm not sure if this matters, but I also ripped/encoded the subtitles from the original movie
No white lines appear during any speed of movement, as I understand the affects of interlacing to be.
Any suggestions?
I use Dvd Decrypter 3, Xmpeg 4.5, and Divx 5.02. I also have divx 3.11 installed.
My first movie's ripping/encoding resulted in perfect quality. However, my next movie resulted in not so much a low-res look, but more of a washed-out look. It looks like your vision when you have a little bit of water in your eyes. The "washed-outness" doesn't mush the whole picture, just in the areas surrounding color changes (like that hazy ring that sometimes appears around the moon ). Also, chunks of pixels are constantly moving on inanimate objects, such as the background or clothing of a character. This affect also appears on black areas, such as during scene changes. None of the effects worsten with fast or slow movement.
Here are the changes from the first, perfect quality movie to the second:
- Increased bitrate from 1500 to 2000
- Interlaced, not progressive (I did not deinterlace; first movie
was progressive)
- Res is 632x356
- In Xmpeg, under "Post Processing," the original ratio was 4:3. I changed this to 16:9 (wasn't sure if this would affect the outcome)
- Since I'm a newb, I'm not sure if this matters, but I also ripped/encoded the subtitles from the original movie
No white lines appear during any speed of movement, as I understand the affects of interlacing to be.
Any suggestions?
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