Differences

This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.

Link to this comparison view

Both sides previous revision Previous revision
Next revision
Previous revision
Last revision Both sides next revision
handbrake [2014/03/12 13:17]
beandog
handbrake [2017/03/01 09:48]
beandog
Line 6: Line 6:
   * [[http://​mattgadient.com/​2013/​06/​12/​a-best-settings-guide-for-handbrake-0-9-9/​|A "best settings"​ guide for Handbrake 0.9.9]]   * [[http://​mattgadient.com/​2013/​06/​12/​a-best-settings-guide-for-handbrake-0-9-9/​|A "best settings"​ guide for Handbrake 0.9.9]]
   * [[https://​trac.handbrake.fr/​wiki/​HandBrakeGuide|HandBrakeGuide]]   * [[https://​trac.handbrake.fr/​wiki/​HandBrakeGuide|HandBrakeGuide]]
 +
 +=== Best Quality ===
 +
 +The best way to get the best quality from a rip is very simple -- try it with some settings and play it back in your client environment and see if you like it or not. :)
 +
 +Trying to find settings to work across the board for everything is only going to cause a lot of problems if you don't start with QA.
 +
 +=== Video Filters ===
 +
 +I did research on video filters related to HandBrake, and how to achieve the target goal I have. For me, it's simple -- no jagged lines on video.
 +
 +My **previous** settings have always been based on cobbled together information from forums, and the HandBrake wiki which (in the past) was ambiguously worded and confusing.
 +
 +Here's what I've found out:
 +
 +  * The ''​deinterlace''​ option uses yadif filter
 +  * The ''​decomb''​ option uses yadif in combination with other filters
  
 **Summary:​** Handbrake is *the best* tool for ripping / encoding DVDS, and works great for any sources ffmpeg can read as well. **Summary:​** Handbrake is *the best* tool for ripping / encoding DVDS, and works great for any sources ffmpeg can read as well.

Navigation