|
View Poll Results: What do you use for your loseless pass? | |||
Lagarith | 11 | 20.00% | |
Huffyuv | 23 | 41.82% | |
MSU | 1 | 1.82% | |
I use the option in MeGui... | 1 | 1.82% | |
Other | 4 | 7.27% | |
Loseless pass? I don't make one | 5 | 9.09% | |
I don't encode... Just passing by... | 10 | 18.18% | |
Voters: 55. You may not vote on this poll |
|
Thread Tools |
2007-06-11, 11:55 | Link #3 |
makes no files now
Join Date: May 2006
|
I use the option in MeGui...
May I ask as to what that represents??? I only know of x264, XviD, LMP4 and Snow in MeGUI (and only two of those can do lossless AFAIK, and for their use I would say rather pointless to use them for a lossless pass). >_> /me voted for Huffy
__________________
|
2007-06-11, 12:41 | Link #4 | |
Banned
Join Date: Jun 2007
|
Quote:
's basically huffyuv from what I know - but from what I also know, last time I checked the file size it produced was much smaller then that of huffyuv I once tried - so I never used that option since I never trusted it . But here's from da wiki: "Pre-rendering job Checking this box before you click 'enqueue' will create an extra job that runs before the encoding. This job will encode the input script to a (lossless) HuffYUV file, and then use that file for input for your encoding. The advantage of this is that your avisynth script will only have to run once, meaning a 2+ pass encode will run faster. Caveats: Lossless files can be large. A 2hr DVD movie will come in around 30gb, a 2hr 720p file closer to 60gb. The huffyuv file is output to the same location as the input script, not to the same location as the final file. " |
|
2007-06-11, 21:50 | Link #12 | |
I see what you did there!
Scanlator
|
Quote:
Encoders are buckets of fun, especially when there is a n00b to pick on.
__________________
|
|
2007-06-12, 15:44 | Link #19 |
King of Hosers
Join Date: Dec 2005
Age: 41
|
Just a minor note, you might want to differentiate the original Huffyuv (which is not YV12 capable) from the one in FFMPEG by referring to it as FF-Huffyuv...or sometimes just abbreviated FFVH (the fourcc used). I usually call it FFVH anyways :P, which is what I voted for...meow .
|
|
|