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  1. i was told by someone a while ago that to get the best results use noise reduction... at do it at high quality mode.... do i move all the sliders to the end? or to when i can see that it's better? or what? check the high quality mode?
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  2. what program are you trying to use?
    what are the specs on your computer?
    In short, what the H%@# are you talking about?!
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  3. i'm sorry i didn't make it clearer, im using tmpg encoder...
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  4. Human j1d10t's Avatar
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    Feb 2003
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    The higher the number for noise reduction, the softer/blurrier the image. Depending on how noisy your source video is, you will need to tweak it to your liking. But I usually set it at 20, 1, 20, and high quality. But as I said, it varies for each project.

    So the best answer is, encode a few minutes of the video, with different settings, burn it to CDRW/DVD-+RW, and test it out.

    Good luck
    "Don't try to be a great man. Just be a man, and let history make its own judgment."
    Zefram Cochrane
    2073
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  5. It also depends on what your source material is. With a noisy source such as many VHS captures, getting the noise reduction setting right in TmpGenc can help quite a lot. Use it on a Divx DVD rip and you are wasting loads of encoding time and unneccsarily softening the final result.
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  6. Video Restorer lordsmurf's Avatar
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    Noise reduction is great.

    But High quality mode is a waste. What miniscule change it makes is unseen on tv anyway. And it doubles encode time.
    Want my help? Ask here! (not via PM!)
    FAQs: Best Blank DiscsBest TBCsBest VCRs for captureRestore VHS
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