Could someone please tell me what is the correct SAR for 4:3 720p?
I have upscaled the Standard Definition video to 960 x 720 and I've added 160 pixels each to the left and right border to make a total of 1280 x 720.
For 720 x 480 4:3 I have a SAR of 8:9 and the video displays correctly but when I do the same thing for the 720p upscaled video, the picture doesn't appear wide enough - it's squashed.
I'm using the "ARS Calculator" program to give me the correct SAR. It works fine for standard definition but it doesn't seem to give the correct values for 4:3 720p.
None of the following work:
- 8:9
- 16:15
- 32:27
		
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	Since you pillarboxed it, SAR is 1:1 or square pixels 
 
 Non square pixels are not supported at 1280x720 resolution for BD anyway
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	Thanks it works great now. Also when viewing in 720 x 480 there's an option on my media player to play in 16:10 which makes the picture slightly wider but still in proportion. What SAR should I use to get that effect in 720 x 480 and in 4:3 720p? 
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	Also using non standard SAR values will cause it to be incompatible with blu-ray (although some authoring software might allow you to make a disc, and some players might play it) 
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	Maybe VideoFanatic is referring to straight 16:9 or 4:3 resizing, vs the official ITU DVD resizing method which isn't exactly 16:9 or 4:3. 
 Although the "16:10" thing doesn't make sense to me, but maybe I'm being dense. 16:10.... maybe that's a PAL description.
 
 As far as I know Bluray only supports SARs of 40:33 and 10:11 for NTSC, and 16:11 and 12:11 for PAL.
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	How can I find out which SAR values are compatible with Bluray? Is there a SAR that gives an aspect ratio of 16:10. Is that Bluray compatible? 
 
 I know viewing a 4:3 720 x 480 video in 16:10 makes it not in proportion. All it's doing is adding about an inch of width to each side. However to me it looks better and less claustrophobic than 16:9.
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	hello_hello is correct: Officially, the only SD blu-ray SAR values supported for NTSC are 10:11 for 4:3 DAR, and 40:33 for 16:9 DAR 
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	Only 1:1 square pixels is supported at that resolution. See post#2 
 
 For 1280x720 , You can make it "wider" by changing the pillarbox dimensions . Instead of 960x720 for the active image area, you might use something wider, and subtract the difference from the pillarbox
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