I'm converting home-shot DVD footage from a Sony DVD Handycam (mini-DVDs) for editing. I'm attempting to get the best quality single-video file to work with, since I can't use VOBs directly in my video editing software. There are other considerations though, so please bear with me:
In short, these are my considerations, top priorities first:Specs of source material:
- Compatibility - needs to be playable on any Win2K-system without any codecs installed, and editable in video software (Adobe) - xvid etc. tends not to be in my experience
- Quality - best quality available with the codecs at hand (see source footage specs below)
- Compression speed - shouldn't take days to compress a 1.4GB miniDVD
- Filesize - least of my worries
Media: 1.4GB miniDVD
Container: MPEG-2
Audio: AC3 48000Hz 256kb/s total, 2 channels, CBR
Video: Frame 704x576, SDE 720x576, FAR 1.222, PAR 1.091, DAR 4:3, ~9300kbps, PAL, 25 fps, interlaced, top field first
So far, I've been using VirtualDub-MPEG2 for compressing the VOBs to AVI using Lame MP3 320kbps and Intel Indeo 5.1 at Quality 100 and keyframes every 25 frames. I also use the built-in deinterlace filter in blend mode on each VOB.
I find that the video becomes grainy at times and the sound quality ranges from mediocre to downright cr*p. I'm not sure what it is in the source material that causes this to happen.
Can I do this better in any way?
Cheers,
Geddeth
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Extract VOB out to uncompressed AVI with WAV/PCM audio. No loss from the MPEG this way. VirtualDub that can open MPEG is the correct tool for this job.
Open in your video editor. I use Adobe Premiere.
Edit as desired, then export from editor to MPEG encoder. I use Adobe MPEG Encoder or Procoder MPEG plugin.
Author DVD in software of choice. I create menu images in Photoshop. I author and compile menus in Ulead DVD Workshoip 2.
Output is professional quality work.
Very streamlined and simple process, not a lot of codecs or software or settings or other such rot. The only requirement is plenty of hard drive space. I have 1TB.
If uncompressed video is too large, consider using the free HuffYUV codec, or maybe the free Adaptec DVSoft codec (DV stream, 13 GB/hour). Or you could always add another hard drive. If you're doing lots of work and quality is priority #1, get the drive, a nice 250GB or larger (Ultra ATA expansion card, or serial ATA motherboard, may be required).
And don't ask for "best". Ask for a "good method" or "help on improving". "Best" is ridiculed around here, and quite rightly so.
edited for spelling, as usualWant my help? Ask here! (not via PM!)
FAQs: Best Blank Discs • Best TBCs • Best VCRs for capture • Restore VHS -
Roger on the 'best' part. There is obviously no such thing.
Will think about the other recommendations and return. Thanks for the swift reply!
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