![]() ![]() For an outcome which could achieve the same quality video had you just gone with the "Constant Quality" slider option in the first place. This makes a nice size file around 3G to 8G 1080p H.264 file that looks great on my 4K TV, and performs well on the other devices. Then I use Handbrake to rip it using a preset I made Blu-Ray.json. Granted some of this can be mitigated by using the 2-Pass method, but in doing so you've doubled your encoding time. I use Makemkv to decrypt the Blu-ray by using the backup feature. OR you're going to get a movie where there's not enough bitrate for the high-motion to stay clear looking, and the still movie portions will have wasted bitrate applied to them. Setting a target file size will either result in a movie that has lots of WASTED bitrate going towards things it doesn't need, thus giving you an artificially inflated file. Part 1: Optimized Settings in Handbrake to Play in Plex Handbrake is a free tool for converting or transcoding video content to several, widely supported codecs, in particular Matroska (MKV) which is what I almost exclusively use. This is the optimal way to compress video. Still scenes will proceed to use very little bitrate, while high-action motion will get more bitrate. What you want to do is tell the program the amount of quality you want retained in the image, and use as little bitrate possible to always achieve that level of quality. So, for this reason, and the fact that average bitrate mode could choose a higher rate factor than you otherwise needed, it's still better to use CRF unless you have a specific reason that a bigger file size just won't do for that particular video. But it takes nearly twice as long because it has to do most of the encode twice (the first pass is a bit quicker - no need to set it to slow first pass). Note that the end result of 2-pass average will be pretty much the same as CRF mode, if you happened to choose an RF value that matched precisely that file size. 30X faster conversion speed and high output quality. More Features: - Convert 250+ video and audio formats in SD/HD/4K. Just by adjusting video, audio settings, you easily can get the best video & audio quality for Plex. ![]() All you need to do is calculate the bitrate needed for your chosen file size - remember to subtract the size of the audio track and any overhead for your container format, subs etc, but those will be minimal, 32kbit + audio track should do it. Its capable of converting MKV, WMV, MOV, FLV, AVI, 3GP, MTS, VOB to Plex most compatible format with fast speed. This would be 2-pass average bitrate mode. Second thing.Is it possible to set a GB target for a movie.i mean if a movie is 30GB large is possible in Handbrake to set it 15GB or less and let the program decide datarate etc ? ![]()
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