![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() I went back to the source file and reapplied all previous changes between each encode so the effects are cumulative and not multi-generational. I did not use Turbo Pass or specify an average bitrate. Re-encoding to High Profile dropped it to 6.11GB.ĭropping to a Pro Logic II mixdown audio track dropped it to 5.94GB.Ģ-pass encoding dropped it to 884MB and made it crap quality. Well, I took my normal profile 7.86GB Little Shop of Horrors MKV made with Handbrake defaults at Normal profile and tried a few tests: Should I even be using Handbrake? Two-pass encoding? What? I'm sure my files are a lot bigger than they need to be. Long story short: I'd like to know how to get reasonable file sizes for feature-length 1080p movies (preferably under 4GB for FAT32). The current 7GB+ per 1080p movie is not going to cut it: I have a 64GB microSD card and 32GB internal memory and I can fill it all right up with surprisingly few movies or TV shows. In the past I often ripped in HD with huge file sizes and transcoded to SD for phones and such with limited storage, but I recently got a 1080p Galaxy Note 3 and want to carry some 1080p content (especially with my MHL adapter). What I'm usually trying to do is make something suitable for streaming to various media devices and watching in Full HD. What is the fastest way to get the main content off the disc where the bottleneck would be the maximum disc/drive transfer speed and not processing/encoding? I think the best thing would be to get the content off the disc as quickly as possible and then process that rip into a smaller files size. Also, sometimes I forget to check "Large file size" in Handbrake, the result is unplayable, and I end up wasting hours (have to start all over). When a rip can take hours something almost always happens before I can finish, like the drive gets disconnected or tugged or dropped and I have to start the rip all over. OK, my notebook (M11x r3) requires an external optical drive which has been nothing but trouble. ![]()
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