![]() I generally don't keep DTS audio though as that tends to be over 1GB on it's own. I generally use x264's default settings and a CRF value of 18 and most/many 720p movie encodes will still come in under DVD5 size. Personally I always use CRF encoding because you can pick a quality you're happy with and every encode will be of a fairly consistent quality relative to the source. I don't use Vidcoder so I don't know what sort of noise filtering it offers. As noisy video is harder to compress using a noise filter can help keep the file size down while maintaining quality. I'd not been big on noise filtering until I started encoding Bluray discs, but these days I often run a noise filter before resizing to 720p. To make it fair, use the same encoder settings each time and use single pass, CRF encoding, rather than 2 pass encoding.Īs many Bluray discs tend to be fairly noisy, you might consider running some sort of noise filter when encoding. Maybe pick a movie you consider to have a high amount of fine detail and re-encode a section of it at both 1080p and 720p to see how much difference you can see. ![]() However rather than take my word, or anyone else's word for it, it really comes down to what you can see yourself. Maybe 1080p worth of noise, but not "detail" as such. In my opinion the majority of Bluray discs don't contain 1080p worth of detail. ![]()
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