The lower the bit rate, the more work needs to be done to get the quality All the encoding you are aiming for is all lossy.Ģ. all to make an informed decision what filtering and settings help the most to archive the best quality possible for a given file size.ġ. If you want the best you can get for a specific file size X manually adjusting a software encoder with per case settings and filtering will do that, but it is a lot of work and time required to learn stuff about the encoder and the encoding settings color spaces, the target format. If you really only want a bit smaller hardware/software and highly adjusted encoding settings do not really bring much. The more you want to lower the bit rate the more the encoder and filtering becomes important. If the final file size doesn't matter then MakeMKV should have been fine. I have a lot on my mind and am a bit scatterbrained from researching so much encoding stuff this week. Thank you everyone and sorry if I got off track in this post. I do not care what the final size is, as long as it is smaller than the original and I want to keep the audio always uncompressed (DTS HD MA, Dolby True HD, etc).Īny help would be greatly appreciated on programs that I need, where to find advanced command lines to use in these programs for the best quality possible, and if I should do HW or SW encoding for the best quality and with time taking into consideration since I have over 2000+ blurays to encode. I have read a lot about how you can manually encode using something like StaxRip and type in manual command lines to get the best quality possible.Ĭan someone please direct me where I can get these advanced setting command lines for 1080p blurays and 4K UHD backups?įinally, if I didn't make it clear, I just want the best quality I can get out of these blu-rays and 4Ks (archive). I think the results look pretty good on both, but I'm not sure what test material I should be using (I used Pulp Fiction Blu-ray). I have tried to use Handbrake H265 with Nvidia Nvenc (Slow at CRF18) and x265 10 bit (Slow at CRF18) and the Nvidia encode took about 13 minutes versus 6.5 hours on the x265 10 bit. I currently have an overclocked i7 8700k with an Nvidia RTX 2080 Super Graphics card. MKV uncompressed files down and save some space. I have room for 2000+ full backups on my NAS, but I would rather encode these. MKV file over to my NAS, but that is becoming a HUGE space detriment. I planned to originally just use MakeMKV and transfer the uncompressed. My goal is to have the best quality (compressed) for 1080p blurays and 4K UHD backups. If I use something like StaxRip and do an advanced command line for the Nvenc on my RTX 2080 super, will it be able to get really good quality out of the blu-ray/4K? Or am I better off using x265 10 bit even though it takes several of hours to encode 1 video? I want the best quality period with no artifacts or anything like that. I have done extensive research on HW vs SW encoding but would like a little more input. I used to use this forum back in the day and had a lot of awesome advice!
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