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Make toast dvd without transcoding mpeg 2
Make toast dvd without transcoding mpeg 2






  1. #Make toast dvd without transcoding mpeg 2 how to#
  2. #Make toast dvd without transcoding mpeg 2 movie#
  3. #Make toast dvd without transcoding mpeg 2 mp4#
  4. #Make toast dvd without transcoding mpeg 2 full#

Your "MKV" files are of the 2nd type, and you probably (inadvertently?) chose to burn them as the 1st type. But, your compatibility varies greatly (usually better w/ newer devices) and only core features are guaranteed (menus, chapters, subs, multiple streams, interactivity, etc are much less supported). If it's the second type, none of that preparation has to be done beforehand. This adds steps, but ensures compatibility and allows for much more & varied features are supported. And then the burning has to be done in a certain way and with a certain strict order. If it's the first type, it has to be prepared to be compliant with a very strict subset of file/folder structure, container, codec, bitrate, and other settings FIRST. Authored media: AudioCD, VideoCD, DVD-Video, DVD-Audio, SACD, HD DVD, Blu-rayĢ. Easy peasy.There are multiple ways of burning media to disc:ġ. That's a whole other thing and is not related to what you're trying to do. It's very simple.īut you were confusing me with the "changing file extension" talk.

#Make toast dvd without transcoding mpeg 2 movie#

pretty much any DVD ripper has the option to extract the main movie without reducing quality.

#Make toast dvd without transcoding mpeg 2 full#

you can extract the main movie and put it into an MKV container while keeping the full quality.

make toast dvd without transcoding mpeg 2

You will need another solution if you just want the main movie. There's no way to pull out just the main movie by changing the file extension. those files contain the main movie and all the other features.

#Make toast dvd without transcoding mpeg 2 how to#

which a couple of us explained what that does and how to do it. you started the thread talking about changing the file extension. An insanely compressed 30 gig Bluray down to lets say 1 gig will still look much better than a 4 gig DVD direct copy. The better solution would be to transcode the Bluray versions of your 50 DVDs since huge quality loss to Bluray will still be better than DVD. You should try one and see if in fact you notice it.

#Make toast dvd without transcoding mpeg 2 mp4#

The only way to make them smaller is to use a more modern video compression format such as x265/HEVC which achieves significant compression improvements over the MP4 used in Bluray and of course much better than DVD.Ī high bitrate transcode should give you decent storage compression with the possibility of a quality loss you won't be able to notice. It is impossible to reduce the storage requirement without transcoding them. If you don't want to transcode them, then just copy them to a large hard drive, approx 2-3 gigs per movie. You just don't seem to be asking an actual question. I also don't want to transcode, as it will drop the quality. I don't care about menus, extra features etc. I have 50 DVDs that I want to put away in storage. If you don't mind the storage hit, you can just ignore all these considerations and just keep original copies. People that transcode all the time have experimented with a lot of variations and usually end up with a preferred tool chain and customized settings that work for them. To make it all work you have to accept your losses and make transcoding decisions that make sense for you and it becomes a subjective process. But of course you don't have access to the original so the transcode process introduces a second type of quality loss that is unavoidable when you use a different compression algorithm. The proper way to do this is to Re-Encode from the original video source since both DVD and Bluray are already compressed formats with a certain amount of loss in quality.

make toast dvd without transcoding mpeg 2

The reason it can work for most people is that there is a difference between actual quality loss and subjective quality loss. To reduce the size of the video file on your disk you need to transcode the original file and it is completely absolutely impossible NOT to lose quality in that process.

make toast dvd without transcoding mpeg 2

VOB file and most media players will recognize it as a MP2. The video on a DVD is encoded in a compressed MP2 video format.Įither format can be copied to a computer directly "as is" bit-for-bit without loss of quality, about 4 gigs for DVD and 20 to 40 gigs for Bluray.įor a DVD you can just look for the. Is it as simple as changing a file extension?








Make toast dvd without transcoding mpeg 2