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  1. Member
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    I guess my question pertains to the quality of the BPF and settings

    I have two encodes of the same movie.
    1080p resolution with Bits/(Pixel*Frame) : 0.074
    720p resolution with Bits/(Pixel*Frame) : 0.192

    They are both 2pass, the 720p does have a higher bit rate, which may be the reason for the higher BPF.

    My question is: Does the higher BPF hold better detail per frame? Even though the higher BPF has lower resolution.
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  2. Originally Posted by Ally68 View Post
    720p does have a higher bit rate, which may be the reason for the higher BPF.
    By definition.

    All it tells you is that one file is bigger than the other.
    Last edited by smrpix; 9th Sep 2014 at 09:52.
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  3. Member
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    So it's nothing really important? I thought it had a little to do with quality.
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  4. Higher bitrate generally implies higher quality, but there are a lot of variables.

    As an example, a static shot of text would likely be much clearer at 1080 than 720 even with a lower bitrate.
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  5. Member
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    The only issue I have with the lower bitrate is banding/blocking. When you take a Full BD and encode down to 1080p w/ 3500 bitrate for example. Or the 720p w/ 4500 bitrate. Upscaling on my 42' TV sometimes look better with a 720p and higher bitrate. I know the encode settings and filters used play a big part as well
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  6. Member
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    BPF is some number derived from the formula (as can be seen above) taking into account
    the bitrate AND resolution. For example, a video @ 2000 kbps:
    A 720p encode using this bitrate would look better than a 1080p encode using this bitrate
    all things being equal (source, encode parameters, etc,etc)

    The 720p would have a higher BPF. The problem with it is that it can't really be used as an indicator
    of quality in general, too many other factors involved.
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  7. Member
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    I understand. Thank you for the quick responses.
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  8. Don't forget that reducing the frame size is a loss of quality too. You're trading off resolution in order to get less blocking artifacts.
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  9. Member
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    I prefer 1080p resolution but then again it's all about the viewing experience.
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