2017-12-19, 10:53 PM
I don't do avisynth frame serving to x264, just intermediate lossless files.
[Idea] x264 BD compliant "perfect" settings - faster version
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2017-12-19, 10:53 PM
I don't do avisynth frame serving to x264, just intermediate lossless files.
Any suggested settings for 720p and 576p encodes? Would the encode be faster than 1080p?
AKA thxita on OriginalTrilogy
I preserve movies as they first appeared in Italy.
2018-01-25, 02:22 PM
^ If you want BD-compliant 720p and 576p, start by looking here. Encoding a given source at a lower resolution with the same settings ought to result in a faster encoding time. If you change settings that affect speed, obviously that has an impact.
2018-01-26, 12:17 AM
Thanks Chewtobacca. I don't need it to be Blu-Ray compliant, I only need it for digital distribution
AKA thxita on OriginalTrilogy
I preserve movies as they first appeared in Italy.
2018-01-26, 01:21 AM
(This post was last modified: 2018-01-26, 01:21 AM by Chewtobacca.)
(2018-01-26, 12:17 AM)Evit Wrote: I don't need it to be Blu-Ray compliant, I only need it for digital distribution In that case, you don't need --bluray-compat, --slices 4, or --fake-interlaced. And you probably don't need to worry about --vbv-maxrate or --vbv-bufsize either, unless you have a particular reason to do so. For digital distribution, I favor CRF encoding; there's no need to run a second pass. The command-line should look very simple.
2018-01-26, 01:31 AM
...but a BD compliant file would be nice, as it would fit perfectly in various cases - burned BD, video file, streaming. Just my 2€c!
2018-01-26, 01:38 AM
@
@Chew CRF encoding would surely take less time to encode but isn't it a lot bigger?
AKA thxita on OriginalTrilogy
I preserve movies as they first appeared in Italy.
2018-01-26, 02:14 AM
(2018-01-26, 01:38 AM)Evit Wrote: @Chew CRF encoding would surely take less time to encode but isn't it a lot bigger? Bigger than what? If you want a file for digital distribution, there's no reason to hit a particular file-size. If you don't like resulting file-size, increase the CRF value. But there's nothing inherent in CRF encoding that generates higher file-sizes.
2018-01-26, 02:23 AM
I meant, to get the same final quality, wouldn't a CBR encode be much bigger in size than 2-pass VBR?
AKA thxita on OriginalTrilogy
I preserve movies as they first appeared in Italy.
2018-01-26, 02:33 AM
We're talking about CRF, not CBR. They're not the same.
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