In the past, when I used Procoder, it was easier. It made all my conversions to what I needed back then: 29.97 fps.
Now I can choose 25fps and 29.97fps for my DVDs, which has saved me from artifacts when going from PAL to NTSC. It has allowed me using Avisynth in more transparent conversions.
At the moment I have an MKV file that is 24fps according to Mediainfo. What should I convert it to in order to have less visible artifacts? 25 or 29.97? How should I do it through Avisynth? What about the audio?
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I would posit that your process so far has been flawed, and has not produced optimal results.
I would encode the MKV file to NTSC resolutions at 23.976 fps, then apply pulldown to get 29.970 fps playback. Encoding at either 25 fps or 29.970 fps will not give you the best result (unless, by chance, the source was originally a PAL video shot at 25 fps - unlikely, but possible)Read my blog here.
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Originally Posted by carlmart
That's for an NTSC DVD. If you want to make it PAL, encode at 24fps and apply DGIndex afterwards for 24->25fps.
And I pretty much agree with guns1inger - if you allow Procoder to change the framerate, the results are most likely sub-optimal.
Edited later to remove DGIndex because I meant to say DGPulldown. -
Originally Posted by guns1inger
I would encode the MKV file to NTSC resolutions at 23.976 fps, then apply pulldown to get 29.970 fps playback. Encoding at either 25 fps or 29.970 fps will not give you the best result (unless, by chance, the source was originally a PAL video shot at 25 fps - unlikely, but possible)
I have seen quite a few mkv files that report being 24fps but that are actually 23.976 fps. I have little faith in the accuracy of the MKV format details.
My concern is to have very little or none conversion artifacts. -
[quote="manono"]
Originally Posted by carlmart
That's for an NTSC DVD. If you want to make it PAL, encode at 24fps and apply DGIndex afterwards for 24->25fps.
And I pretty much agree with guns1inger - if you allow Procoder to change the framerate, the results are most likely sub-optimal. -
[quote="manono"]
Originally Posted by carlmart -
Originally Posted by carlmart
Originally Posted by guns1inger
Originally Posted by jagabo -
Yes, of course I got it was DGPulldown that I would have to use. And I did.
Results look in sync, though sound appear to be a bit delayed. I will try correcting that and see if it's total or gradual. I think it's the former. -
If you have encoded at the original framerate and then used DGPulldown correctly there should be no sync issues, as the actual running time has not changed.
Read my blog here.
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Originally Posted by guns1inger
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