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  1. Member
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    I have really noticed that the last dvd that I made did not look that good. I was wondering if anyone could help me with my settings.
    Here are the properties that I have. What should I change?
    It is standard def with a brand new camera.

    untitled.jpg
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    Here are my rendering settings.



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    Anyone have any ideas?
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  4. Can you be more specific about what was "wrong" with it?

    What was the camera footage? DV?

    I would checkmark 2pass in the render settings, instead of 1pass vbr
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  5. Set it to "two pass" and a minimum bitrate of 2,000,000 bps, also set maximum to 9,000,000 bps to be safe. Make sure you have the right aspect ratio, if the source is 16:9 then output 16:9.
    BTW: is that Godzilla in the background? :P
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    The camera had been set to 16:9 and I needed to convert it to 4:3. Could that have been some of the problem? Here is the situation I am in. Tell me what you think would work best?
    I put the video of the football game in to be broadcast out to people. Not everyone has 16:9 capable sets so I was trying to make it possible for people to watch it without bars. Would you just do everything at 16:9 and let them worry about it or set the cam to 4:3 and render all at 4:3? Or leave it at 16:9 and render all at 16:9 and just broadcast it at 16:9?

    Yes, it was DV with a S def mini DV camera. Camera set to 16:9. Thanks all for you quick responses.

    No, not Godzilla. It was a rock in the ocean.
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  7. if it were mine, and already shot in 16/9 i'd render it as 16/9 encoded as 4:3. the top and bottom black bar are encoded into it. people with sd tvs see it with the bars, people with hd tvs can zoom in and remove the bars.

    miniDV to me looks better when shot 4:3.
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    What about the project properties that I have listed in my first post? Any advice there?
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    Originally Posted by minidv2dvd
    if it were mine, and already shot in 16/9 i'd render it as 16/9 encoded as 4:3. the top and bottom black bar are encoded into it. people with sd tvs see it with the bars, people with hd tvs can zoom in and remove the bars.

    miniDV to me looks better when shot 4:3.
    Ok, I may have lost you there. You are saying that if shot in 16:9 render it as 16:9 encoded as 4:3. How would I encode it as 4:3? I may just misunderstand what you are saying. You think mini DV looks better at 4:3?? Could you just explain a little more. Thanks.
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    Originally Posted by poisondeathray
    Can you be more specific about what was "wrong" with it?

    What was the camera footage? DV?

    I would checkmark 2pass in the render settings, instead of 1pass vbr
    The edges are very zig zagged if that is a word. Not the good quality I have been seeing.
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  11. I would keep it as 16:9 so you don't lose any action. As for "zig zagged" it sounds like you need to reverse the field order, use Mediainfo on your DV files to see what field order they are and encode the same way.
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    Here is what mediainfo shows. Can you help me with that?

    untitled.jpg
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  13. in mediainfo change the view to text. you will get more of the needed info.

    in the render settings change the aspect ratio to 16/9 and it should encode all the 16/9 video but add black bars top and bottom.
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    Ok, here is the text
    This is my original video.
    untitled.jpg
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  15. what i was tying to say before was that i think miniDV cam should shoot in 4:3 not 16/9. there tends to be a bit of blurriness when the 720X480 is stretched out to 854x480 on playback.

    i don't see any thing else out of order in your settings the others haven't already mentioned.

    you did right click on all the DVavi source files in vegas and make sure they are identified as widescreen DVavi 16/9? lower field first?
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    Ok, thanks.
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  17. Member edDV's Avatar
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    DV 16x9 quality from the cam depends on whether the camera shoots with a full 16:9 sensor or crops it out of 4:3 (cheaper and older camcorders).

    If you shoot 16x9 but want a 4:3 version you can letterbox, crop the sides or horizontally reframe the shot (horizontal pan/zoom in post) clip by clip.

    Your settings look OK. You can increase average bit rate for better compression quality.
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    How high would you push avg bit rate?
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    Originally Posted by edDV

    If you shoot 16x9 but want a 4:3 version you can letterbox, crop the sides or horizontally reframe the shot (horizontal pan/zoom in post) clip by clip.
    How would I do this? I have never done this before and am still learning more about Vegas Pro every time I use it. Any steps I need to take?
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  20. Member edDV's Avatar
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    Originally Posted by ingeborgdot
    How high would you push avg bit rate?
    If you use AC-3 or mp2 audio, you can go up to 9500kbps or more (about one hour worth).
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    The videos all run from 58-112 minutes depending on the game.
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  22. with videos that length you might as well use cbr 8000. no need for vbr.
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    What will that give me compared to vbr? Thanks again for your time and responses.
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  24. cbr will encode much faster, and at the same high quality throughout the video. vbr is useful for encoding video that needs to allocate bits sparingly where it can, to reduce the file size. you don't need to.
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  25. Member edDV's Avatar
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    Look at the calculator to relate average bit rate to minutes.
    https://www.videohelp.com/calc
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