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Old 6th October 2024, 16:05   #32021  |  Link
jdobbs
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Quote:
Originally Posted by musiclover View Post
Is there a hidden option to prevent BD-RB from converting the subs to 23,976 fps?
I'll look. But I don't think so.

The real question here is why was the audio out of sync the first time you tried it? What kind of audio was it?
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Last edited by jdobbs; 6th October 2024 at 16:17.
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Old 6th October 2024, 16:19   #32022  |  Link
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Originally Posted by iambryanknowles View Post
Last - could you either add a warning when FLAC audio tracks are ignored on import, or have them automatically convert to ac3?
Hmm... I don't think I've ever seen a video file that used FLAC for its audio.
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Old 6th October 2024, 17:41   #32023  |  Link
musiclover
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jdobbs View Post
I'll look. But I don't think so.

The real question here is why was the audio out of sync the first time you tried it? What kind of audio was it?
6 channel E-AC-3 JOC. BD_RB converted it to ac3.

Code:
General
Unique ID                   : 285951807814491606971365394848124601680 (0xD720509F64DCD036067E8C51CF458550)
Complete name               : E:\the.lord.of.the.rings.the.rings.of.power.s02e07.doomed.to.die.720p.amzn.web-dl.ddp5.1.atmos.h.264-flux.mkv
Format                      : Matroska
Format version              : Version 4
File size                   : 1.46 GiB
Duration                    : 1 h 12 min
Overall bit rate            : 2 900 kb/s
Frame rate                  : 24.000 FPS
Writing application         : mkvmerge v85.0 ('Shame For You') 64-bit
Writing library             : libebml v1.4.5 + libmatroska v1.7.1

Video
ID                          : 1
Format                      : AVC
Format/Info                 : Advanced Video Codec
Format profile              : High@L3.1
Format settings             : CABAC / 4 Ref Frames
Format settings, CABAC      : Yes
Format settings, Reference  : 4 frames
Codec ID                    : V_MPEG4/ISO/AVC
Duration                    : 1 h 12 min
Bit rate mode               : Constant
Bit rate                    : 2 319 kb/s
Nominal bit rate            : 4 000 kb/s
Width                       : 1 248 pixels
Height                      : 520 pixels
Display aspect ratio        : 2.40:1
Frame rate mode             : Constant
Frame rate                  : 24.000 FPS
Color space                 : YUV
Chroma subsampling          : 4:2:0
Bit depth                   : 8 bits
Scan type                   : Progressive
Bits/(Pixel*Frame)          : 0.149
Stream size                 : 1.17 GiB (80%)
Language                    : English (US)
Default                     : Yes
Forced                      : No
Color range                 : Limited
Color primaries             : BT.709
Transfer characteristics    : BT.709
Matrix coefficients         : BT.709

Audio
ID                          : 2
Format                      : E-AC-3 JOC
Format/Info                 : Enhanced AC-3 with Joint Object Coding
Commercial name             : Dolby Digital Plus with Dolby Atmos
Codec ID                    : A_EAC3
Duration                    : 1 h 12 min
Bit rate mode               : Constant
Bit rate                    : 576 kb/s
Channel(s)                  : 6 channels
Channel layout              : L R C LFE Ls Rs
Sampling rate               : 48.0 kHz
Frame rate                  : 31.250 FPS (1536 SPF)
Compression mode            : Lossy
Stream size                 : 298 MiB (20%)
Language                    : English (US)
Service kind                : Complete Main
Default                     : Yes
Forced                      : No
Complexity index            : 16
Number of dynamic objects   : 15
Bed channel count           : 1 channel
Bed channel configuration   : LFE
Dialog Normalization        : -22 dB
compr                       : -0.28 dB
dialnorm_Average            : -22 dB
dialnorm_Minimum            : -22 dB
dialnorm_Maximum            : -22 dB

Text #1
ID                          : 3
Format                      : UTF-8
Codec ID                    : S_TEXT/UTF8
Codec ID/Info               : UTF-8 Plain Text
Duration                    : 1 h 6 min
Bit rate                    : 1 b/s
Frame rate                  : 0.009 FPS
Count of elements           : 34
Stream size                 : 675 Bytes (0%)
Title                       : Forced
Language                    : English (US)
Default                     : Yes
Forced                      : Yes

Text #2
ID                          : 4
Format                      : UTF-8
Codec ID                    : S_TEXT/UTF8
Codec ID/Info               : UTF-8 Plain Text
Duration                    : 1 h 7 min
Bit rate                    : 29 b/s
Frame rate                  : 0.126 FPS
Count of elements           : 508
Stream size                 : 14.6 KiB (0%)
Language                    : English (US)
Default                     : No
Forced                      : No

Text #3
ID                          : 5
Format                      : UTF-8
Codec ID                    : S_TEXT/UTF8
Codec ID/Info               : UTF-8 Plain Text
Duration                    : 1 h 7 min
Bit rate                    : 37 b/s
Frame rate                  : 0.179 FPS
Count of elements           : 724
Stream size                 : 18.5 KiB (0%)
Title                       : SDH
Language                    : English (US)
Default                     : No
Forced                      : No

Menu
00:00:00.000                : en:Studio Logo
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Last edited by musiclover; 11th October 2024 at 12:52.
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Old 7th October 2024, 01:00   #32024  |  Link
iambryanknowles
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jdobbs View Post
The bitrate used is relative to the original bitrate (and size) for that file.
For the DVD conversion, the bitrate stayed within about 300kbps which isn't much in the grand scheme of things. But occasionally when creating quick play playlists from different sourced anime fan subs, file size can vary greatly - my last project has a 2gb HEVC 80 minute video and a 3 GB AVC 20 minute video - the second video was calculated at a much higher bitrate.

In the same vein, flac is a popular anime sub release format, since a lot of sources are Japanese with LPCM.
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Old 17th October 2024, 09:27   #32025  |  Link
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Trying to IVTC some Pokemon DVDs and am getting combing artifacts. Tried to add FieldDeinterlace as added AVS script, but anything added is placed before the plugins being loaded and the IVTC. Is there a reason for this?

Then tried to compare the results using just the default program deinterlace. Hidden options says that default is SmoothDeinterlace, and no field blending, but the workfiles script shows deinterlacing defaults to FieldDeinterlace with blend=true.

Last edited by iambryanknowles; 17th October 2024 at 09:50.
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Old 19th October 2024, 08:48   #32026  |  Link
musiclover
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jdobbs View Post
I'll look. But I don't think so.

The real question here is why was the audio out of sync the first time you tried it? What kind of audio was it?
6 channel E-AC-3 JOC. BD_RB converted it to ac3.

I kept going back to my project of making episode blu-rays of 24 FPS files. I found out that the length of the imported files in the pseudo bluray is 4 or 5 seconds longer than the original files. That never happens with PAL or NTSC 23,976 of 29,97 episodes. With the use of ''IMPORT_FORCE_FRAMERATE=24'' the length of the episodes stays the same.

Last edited by musiclover; 19th October 2024 at 08:54.
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Old 19th October 2024, 20:00   #32027  |  Link
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Quote:
Originally Posted by musiclover View Post
6 channel E-AC-3 JOC. BD_RB converted it to ac3.
I wasn't aware of the ''IMPORT_FORCE_FRAMERATE=24'' option. Nice! Guess it's time to download the latest build. That will come in handy. Will eliminate the extra step I'm taking now when encoding menu background videos that are in 24fps.

Last edited by Lowpro; 19th October 2024 at 20:04.
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Old 20th October 2024, 08:29   #32028  |  Link
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Quote:
Originally Posted by iambryanknowles View Post
Trying to IVTC some Pokemon DVDs and am getting combing artifacts.
The question is are the DVDs true 29.97 fps with 3:2 pulldown? If there is 3:2 pulldown, is the cadence there or was the source material edited 29.97 such that the pulldown cadence is drastically lost. If the 3:2 pulldown cadence is drastically lost, IVTC isn't going to be able to recover the 23.976 frame rate cleanly.

There are other reasons that could be causing the issue. You need to supply us with the technical info regarding the DVD.
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Old 3rd November 2024, 21:54   #32029  |  Link
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TSMUXER ERR: 0xFFFFFFFE and a too large AV frame

I tried to make a blu-ray small enough for a 25gb disc by blanking half the content. But there was a pop-up with this content:

-----------------------------------------------------------------
Audio Detection Mismatch

The audio type for PID 1102 determined by reading the PAD/PMT
program information (DTS HDMA) does not match the detected audio
(AAC). In many cases, this is caused by emulation of audio headers
(false detection) and the PAT/PMT type is the correct type.

Hit Yes to use the PAT/PMT type.
Hit No to use the detected type.
Hit Cancel to disable this stream.

YES NO CANCEL
-----------------------------------------------------------------

The log mentions a TSMUXER ERR: 0xFFFFFFFE and a too large AV frame.

-----------------------------------------------------------------
[11.03.24] BD Rebuilder v0.62.12
[21.44.05] Source: DISC-1_-_CAMEL___MIRAGE
- Input BD size: 22,43 GB
- Approximate total content: [02:47:34.794]
- Target BD size: 22,95 GB
- Windows Version: 6.2 [9200]
- Auto Quality: Very Good (Very Fast), 1-Pass VBR
- Decoding/Frame serving: NVENCC
- Audio Settings: AC3=0 DTS=0 HD=1 Kbs=640
[21.44.07] PHASE ONE, Encoding
- [21.44.07] Processing: VID_00000 (1 of 9)
- [21.44.07] Extracting A/V streams [VID_00000]
- TSMUXER ERR: 0xFFFFFFFE
- Extracting video streams [VID_00000]
- Extracting audio/subtitle streams [VID_00000]
- TSMUXER ERR: 0xFFFFFFFE
- AV frame too large (57600 bytes). Increase AV buffer.
- Extracting audio streams [VID_00000]
- TSMUXER ERR: 0xFFFFFFFE
- Error in attempt to extract audio.
- AV frame too large (57600 bytes). Increase AV buffer.
- AV frame too large (57600 bytes). Increase AV buffer.
[21.44.56] - Failed to retrieve audio, aborted
-----------------------------------------------------------------

This happens when I hit Yes, but also when I hit No. So I think the real culprit is the AV frame.

Is there anything to be done? How to increase the AV buffer?

Last edited by musiclover; 3rd November 2024 at 22:32.
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Old 3rd November 2024, 22:40   #32030  |  Link
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If all fails burn the mkv directly to the disc. As long as your BD player can play a file on a disc.
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Old 3rd November 2024, 22:50   #32031  |  Link
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Quote:
Originally Posted by doobre View Post
If all fails burn the mkv directly to the disc. As long as your BD player can play a file on a disc.
It's no mkv but a blu-ray
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Old 3rd November 2024, 22:53   #32032  |  Link
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Could use makemkv” to create an mkv from the BD disc or folders
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Old 4th November 2024, 06:22   #32033  |  Link
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Maybe you hit a tsMuxeR demux limitation, or BD-R misinterprets a stream as being AAC.
(as blu-ray cannot have AAC audio)
You may want to demux the assets using DGDemux and work from there.
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Old 4th November 2024, 10:39   #32034  |  Link
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TSMUXER ERR: 0xFFFFFFFE and a too large AV frame

Thank you all for contributing. But after a re-rip all is well.
What a nuisance a faulty rip can be.

By the way.... Can the AV buffer in TSMUXER be increased?

Last edited by musiclover; 8th November 2024 at 20:10.
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Old 8th November 2024, 09:47   #32035  |  Link
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Just reporting a minor bug.

After BD Rebuilder reports an audio/PGS sizing issue and choosing to continue the log window stops reporting the progress of the remainder of the job. The log itself keeps filling up but it is not visible in the log window.

Last edited by musiclover; 8th November 2024 at 13:57.
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Old 9th November 2024, 06:36   #32036  |  Link
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Not sure if it's the same for other sources, but when importing PAL MKVs with Pal to Film set, chapters aren't adjusted to fit the new timing. Not sure how else to do it, but MKVToolnix GUI allows you to set a stretch parameter in the options setting of chapter files - assuming it works in the CLI too - just in case you're not sure of a way to do it.

Also, it would be nice if when both Convert SD to 1080 and Convert 1920x1080 to 1440x1080 were selected, that the output was 1440x1080 - right now it only upconverts to 1920x1080 and ignores the other option.
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Old 10th November 2024, 07:20   #32037  |  Link
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Quote:
Originally Posted by iambryanknowles View Post
Not sure if it's the same for other sources, but when importing PAL MKVs with Pal to Film set, chapters aren't adjusted to fit the new timing
What new timing? 25 fps film speed is legal for Blu-rays. If BDRB is trying to change to 23.976 (or 24) fps, IMHO, that would be wrong. By keeping it at 25 fps, there shouldn't be a timing issue. What did you end up with for the frame rate?
Quote:
Also, it would be nice if when both Convert SD to 1080 and Convert 1920x1080 to 1440x1080 were selected, that the output was 1440x1080 - right now it only upconverts to 1920x1080 and ignores the other option.
I'm curious as to what you would convert from 1920 to 1440. Normally, taking a 1920 video to 1440 would end up squeezing it. If the video within the 1920 was 4:3, then you would have to crop the black vertical bars to get to 1440.
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Old 10th November 2024, 09:12   #32038  |  Link
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PAL to FILM is in BDRB hidden options.It's just to slow down 25fps to 23.976 so that it plays back smoothly on a 120hz screen. I've never tried to play 25fps on my Blu-ray player before- I'm assuming it would have to add frames to pad the video to play back at a standard 29.97 which would disrupt smooth camera panning.

I was given 500 single layer DVD+Rs so I've been playing around a lot - squeezing to 1440x1080 with sar 4:3 reduces number of encoded pixels by 1/4 - on a DVD-5 that gives better overall quality than encoding the same thing at full 1920x1080.

I mentioned SD to 1080, but I more often use the 720 to 1080 option for 29.97fps videos since encoding to 720p requires doubling the frames encoding at 59.94fps to be compliant.
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Old 11th November 2024, 04:09   #32039  |  Link
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Quote:
Originally Posted by iambryanknowles View Post
PAL to FILM is in BDRB hidden options.It's just to slow down 25fps to 23.976 so that it plays back smoothly on a 120hz screen. I've never tried to play 25fps on my Blu-ray player before- I'm assuming it would have to add frames to pad the video to play back at a standard 29.97 which would disrupt smooth camera panning.
All of this depends on your equipment, both the player and the TV. Thinking back, not all U.S. sold players support 25 fps material.Stupid really, but that is the U.S. product. IMHO, 120 Hz video playback is a gimmick. I prefer 23.976/24/25 fps material get displayed at that rate. What is interesting in that my setup, with a projector, results in 1080p/25 material being converted to 1080p/60. But, if I upconvert to 2160p/25, then the system will play it at 25 fps. AFAICT, 1080p/25 is not natural for my projector. It is the projector that doesn't like 1080p/25. The player is 4k and so is the projector. You'd have to look at the specs for your devices.
Quote:
I was given 500 single layer DVD+Rs so I've been playing around a lot - squeezing to 1440x1080 with sar 4:3 reduces number of encoded pixels by 1/4 - on a DVD-5 that gives better overall quality than encoding the same thing at full 1920x1080.
Keep in mind you really don't gain much. Why? Because black compresses to a lot less bits. So, taking away the "few" bits doesn't really gain you anything. But yes, a lot of people do crop the black, which is why a lot of videos have letterbox bars removed as well. When it comes to 4K videos, I have to restore the black because the projector will vertically expand the video to fill 2160p. But 1080p material it leaves alone. Go figure.
Quote:
I mentioned SD to 1080, but I more often use the 720 to 1080 option for 29.97fps videos since encoding to 720p requires doubling the frames encoding at 59.94fps to be compliant.
I'm not sure that applies to MKV files. Yes, Blu-ray authored 720p does have that framerate restriction. But, for simple MKV playback, it depends on what your hardware will allow. When it comes to Old Doctor Who episodes at 576/25, I have to redo them as 2160p/25 in order to play them at 25 fps.Keep in mind that my projector upscales everything (other than 3D) to 4K. So, by doing it myself, I can keep the frame rate.

I store all these videos on HDDs, not DVDs or BDs.

Fine print: YMMV

Last edited by MrVideo; 11th November 2024 at 10:41.
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Old 15th November 2024, 17:20   #32040  |  Link
jdobbs
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Quote:
Originally Posted by iambryanknowles View Post
Not sure if it's the same for other sources, but when importing PAL MKVs with Pal to Film set, chapters aren't adjusted to fit the new timing. Not sure how else to do it, but MKVToolnix GUI allows you to set a stretch parameter in the options setting of chapter files - assuming it works in the CLI too - just in case you're not sure of a way to do it.

Also, it would be nice if when both Convert SD to 1080 and Convert 1920x1080 to 1440x1080 were selected, that the output was 1440x1080 - right now it only upconverts to 1920x1080 and ignores the other option.
Hmm... I'll have to look at that. I know I adjusted audio and subtitles when that hidden option is set -- but it's been a while, and I can't remember how/if I adjusted chapter points.
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