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Produce Profiles
RonH
Contributor Location: Norway (from Australia) Joined: Sep 05, 2011 10:13 Messages: 364 Offline
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I get soooo confused
Normally I would select (PAL) DVD HQ 720x576/50i (8 Mbps) to Produce and then subsequently Burn a DVD Video MPEG-2/HQ Best Quality which seems to give an OK result on a dvd player. But should I consider other file formats and are there 'layman' descriptions of what all these options are for and when they are used? Tried a bit of web searching but still confused

Just found this ...
http://videoproductiontips.com/digital-video-file-formats-and-other-technical-mumbo-jumbo-2/
... so will have a good read

This message was edited 2 times. Last update was at Dec 09. 2012 11:22

CYa Ron (W10/i5gen8/Nvidia)
Someone famous once said: "We only have the 4th dimension of 'time' so that everything does not all happen at once"
James1
Senior Contributor Location: Surrey, B.C., Canada Joined: Jun 10, 2010 16:20 Messages: 1783 Offline
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Hi,
Maybe this link will explain
http://www.videoformatguide.com/mp4-video-format/
jim Intel i7-2600@3.4Gz Geforce 560ti-1GB Graphic accelerator, windows 7 Premium 12GB memory

Visit GranPapa64's channel for your YouTube experience of the day!
RonH
Contributor Location: Norway (from Australia) Joined: Sep 05, 2011 10:13 Messages: 364 Offline
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Thanks for that link Jim about MP4.
Searching around I came across this:

MPEG-2 is the format used for standard DVD players and digital broadcast television coming from your cable company.
Commercially produced DVD movies, home-recorded DVD discs, and most digital satellite TV broadcasts employ MPEG2 video compression to deliver their high-quality picture. If you rent a movie on DVD, it’s MPEG-2.


So it seems that MPEG-2 is still the best bet for dvd production for use in a dvd player ... correct?
What format do our experts use for making dvd's? CYa Ron (W10/i5gen8/Nvidia)
Someone famous once said: "We only have the 4th dimension of 'time' so that everything does not all happen at once"
James1
Senior Contributor Location: Surrey, B.C., Canada Joined: Jun 10, 2010 16:20 Messages: 1783 Offline
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Hi,
I use the Mpeg-2 with high def for standard DVD's and AVCHD H.264 for Blu ray DVD's, burn to folder both , then ImgBurn to write to disk. In both cases the quality is very good.
Jim Intel i7-2600@3.4Gz Geforce 560ti-1GB Graphic accelerator, windows 7 Premium 12GB memory

Visit GranPapa64's channel for your YouTube experience of the day!
James Dotson
Senior Contributor Location: Tennessee Joined: Aug 24, 2009 20:40 Messages: 3066 Offline
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MPEG 2 is the only format for DVD. That is the DVD standard and is unlikely to change. __________________________________
CORNBLOSSOM
RonH
Contributor Location: Norway (from Australia) Joined: Sep 05, 2011 10:13 Messages: 364 Offline
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Thanks for the straight answers which confirm I'm on the right (only) track.
Going from Edit to Produce to Burn, would you Produce in MPEG-2 and then use this file to Burn the DVD? Or would you Produce in another format or just use the original Timeline data as is? Is there an advantage burning to a Folder and then burning these files to disc?
Maybe it does not matter which method is used in terms of final quality?

This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at Dec 10. 2012 02:20

CYa Ron (W10/i5gen8/Nvidia)
Someone famous once said: "We only have the 4th dimension of 'time' so that everything does not all happen at once"
ynotfish
Senior Contributor Location: N.S.W. Australia Joined: May 08, 2009 02:06 Messages: 9977 Online
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Hi Ron -

If your main purpose is to burn DVDs, then producing to MPEG-2 DVD HQ then using that produced file to burn to disc is a reasonable process. In fact all it does is take a little load off your PC.

I rarely burn discs - in fact only for others - but when I do I:
1. First produce the final video to AVC H.264 Full HD at an appropriate bitrate (~ 20+MBps) for my own purposes (viewing through media player)
2. Create Disc (DVD/BR) > create folder
3. Use Power2Go or imgburn to create the disc(s) from that folder

When the video is destined for YouTube (not disc), I still complete step 1 (above). I either post the 1920x1080 file to YT or re-produce to 1280x720 (AVC, MPEG-4 or WMV, depending on duration) for YT.

There's no single answer or "right" way - we all have different purposes.

Cheers - Tony

This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at Dec 10. 2012 03:39


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RonH
Contributor Location: Norway (from Australia) Joined: Sep 05, 2011 10:13 Messages: 364 Offline
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Thanks Tony for this summary.
Ron CYa Ron (W10/i5gen8/Nvidia)
Someone famous once said: "We only have the 4th dimension of 'time' so that everything does not all happen at once"
RonH
Contributor Location: Norway (from Australia) Joined: Sep 05, 2011 10:13 Messages: 364 Offline
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Some time ago, I mentioned in another thread that when playing Produced videos on my pc they where not very sharp, though OK when played as a dvd on my tv.

I have found out where my mistake was:
I Produced video files only for burning to DVD (not Blueray) eg MPEG2. When I Produce at AVC H.264 Full HD at an appropriate bitrate I get a very clear picture viewing through the pc media player and I can then use this produced video for for burning a DVD in the MPEG2 DVD HQ format.

Took me a while to work this out ... even though I was told Put it down to age

Thanks all. CYa Ron (W10/i5gen8/Nvidia)
Someone famous once said: "We only have the 4th dimension of 'time' so that everything does not all happen at once"
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