![]() Quite honestly I don't care about the time.if it takes me two years to compress everything then so be it. Last movie I did was The Martian Extended Edition which went from a initial rip of 42.4 Gb down to 11.6 Gb but took a little over 2 days. This is resulting in a nice filesize drop but at the cost of speed. Example: The original Alien, probably because of all the grain, dropped like 5% so I kept the original.įor 4k however, since I don't want to lose much if anything, I've been going with H.265 (10-bit), Frame Rate same as source constant, CQ of 20, encoder Slow, Encoder profile and level auto, audio passthrough, all filters off. If it's more then 20% I check a couple scenes to make sure it looks good then it goes on my NAS. Once it's done I check the file size and if I didn't get at least 20% I just keep the original. If I really want to watch the commentary track or outtakes I'll go get the disk and play it on my XBox but that's rare.įor the BluRays I have been compressing them with H.264, Frame rate same as source constant, CQ of 18, encoder Slower, encoder profile and level auto, audio passthrough. Each rip was just the main movie, a single audio track (the highest available), and all English subtitles. ![]() I have ripped my entire collection and put all the discs into binders into a fire safe. So after way too much money I now only have a handful of old DVDs to upgrade (Grandmas Boy, The Abyss when it comes out in 4k, etc) and my library stands at 260 4k's, 180 BR's, and the handful of DVDs. So I'll start by saying I have been going through my movie library and investing a good amount in upgrading all my old DVD's and BR to 4k. ![]()
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