It depends on how absolute the quality loss is. Can you convert it with 99% quality, yes. 100% never
You can achieve transparency. That's where it looks close to the point where it's difficult to tell. About 3 to 4mbps works. There will always be some quality loss though since all codecs throw away information in the process.
True. But you won't save any space. MPEG-4 supports a lossless encoding option, however, it will used way more bits then the raw MPEG-2 already takes up.
If you are shooting for a smaller file, then there WILL be quality loss, there is no way around it. However, that loss can be very minimal. My recommendation is using x264 with CRF mode. a setting of 18 on veryslow or slow is considered by most to be transparent and should result in a smaller file then your MPEG2 encoded video.
As I said in my post above, the Mpeg-4 standard supports a lossless encoding mode. However, the output files will be bigger then the input.
Thanks. How much smaller? For example "a river runs through it" folder is 5.1GB right now.
PS that last stuff is greek to me. What app are you talking about? I use DVD shrink.
That does not make any sense. I thought the whole idea with MPEG4 was we have better processors now so we can do more math and thus make smaller file sizes than mpeg2
Thanks. How much smaller? For example "a river runs through it" folder is 5.1GB right now.
PS that last stuff is greek to me. What app are you talking about? I use DVD shrink.
As I said in my post above, the Mpeg-4 standard supports a lossless encoding mode. However, the output files will be bigger then the input.
I have an x264 of Contact that's about 2gb. It looks indistinguishable from my DVD.
There will still be loss because of the way the matrices are used to interpret the data from what the decoder output to what the encoder inputs. Studios keep film stored as one TGA file for each frame of film for that reason rather than just converting it to a lossless format .
It is also a good way to back up DVD collections at home but it takes a ton of space.
I'm pretty sure the reason they stick with TGA files is for easier editability and not really anything to do with storage concerns. Plus, a bit lost in a TGA file means nothing compared to a bit lost in a losslessly compressed version of that file. For a lossless compression scheme the reproduced output is going to be the same as the input, the only way there will be a difference is if they applied some sort of pre/post filter to the file.
Given how cheap external hard drives are, it might be better to go that route and just keep the raw MPEG2 rips. You can store approximately 125 DVD movies on a 1TB drive. This is the route I would go if you don't want quality loss.
A NAS server is another option. This is what I have for my streaming setup. I took an old laptop and an external USB HDD running PS3 Media Server. Works great.
You're my new hero cogman.. Thanks. I'll take your cues and get x264 and use settings advised. I tried handbrake on "high profile" and a few other settings in the advanced tab and video looked poor and took about 6 hours for video in question. trimmed form 5.1GB to 3.2 only.
For ripping I use anydvd.
how you rip the files doesn't really matter. experiment with RF numbers in handbrake (under the video tab -> constant quality) and you will find something that is both transparent and much lower bitrate than MPEG2. do it on your i7. yes, extreme quality encoding takes time.
Did use i7
Following were changes from High Profile Preset built in to Zebo's custom preset
-Video tab Constant Quality 76.96%
-Subtitles tab - Burn in forced
-Advanced
Direct prediction - automatic
Pyramidal B frames Checked
Motion Estimated Method - Uneven Multi Hexagon
Subpixel Motion estimation - 9
Motion Estimation Range - 24
Trellis - 2
No fast P skip checked
No DCT decimate checked
Looked like shit took forever and didnt save much space.
I thought I'd add that you can remux the mpeg2 and one english track into an mkv, and you would probably shave 1-2 GB per dvd with no quality loss whatsoever.