- #Tmpgenc video mastering works 5 mkv archive
- #Tmpgenc video mastering works 5 mkv full
- #Tmpgenc video mastering works 5 mkv software
I've spent hours trying out preset profiles TAW5 fully re-encodes it to ReFrames: 3 frames. When I use the default 3 ref frames in x264, MediaInfo reports ReFrames: 4 frames and
Real time clip length to process the same clip. On my machine TMW5 takes about 4X real time clip length to process AVC while x264 takes about 1.5X Of TAW5 as having either ReFrames: 3 frames or ReFRames: 6 frames. X264 settings that TAW5 doesn't want to fully re-encode. It takes a long time for TMPGEnc to do anything with AVCHD source and I haven't found any Video quality a bit but it doesn't help with improving processing time. My work flow normally includes pre-processing with AviSynth as it seems to improve
#Tmpgenc video mastering works 5 mkv archive
I mostly archive my video stuff to DVD-R and I've found the results as acceptable. Xpress4/TMPGEnc Authoring Works 4 and now TMPGEnc Mastering Works 5/TAW5. I 've been using the TMPGEnc stuff for several years and went along with TMPGEnc It's way faster to encode the video separately with x264 and then The blurays will not scratch as easy as my dvd's will, and since a lot of stuff I have is older 80's, they are out of print now, and I do not want to have to scour ebay for them at horrific prices haha. Is that part of the standard as well?Īll I want to do is move my bought dvd's to bluray for easier watching, and continue to keep my originals in their rubbermaid coffin. Because of this, you can easily hit the 99 chapter limitation that they have. Sp you will have your track listed, then all the chapters in that track as chapters 2-6 and then the next ep start at chapter 7 with its chapters as 8-11 and so on. But if you have chapter breaks, then it includes them in the actual files, because it only sees the episodes as chapters of that initial track. Eg if I want to have 2-3 seasons of a show on the bluray, I want to be able to select season 2, and have all the episodes listed and be able to select what episode I want etc. And to make things even easier, I dunno if this is bluray standard or not, allow track in a track. I just with they had an option for all tracks to have certain sub parts of mkvs take certain tracks in the files. It boasts 8 subtitle tracks, but makes it hard when it really only understand srt or their custom subtitles natively.
#Tmpgenc video mastering works 5 mkv software
I bought the software because it is promising, but I just wish they supported more subtitle formats. This is tedious when you have to do it for 24+ episodes! It will understand vobsub, but you have to click on the import subtitles option and select it from the drop down. Once it was selected I then had to tell the main track property that it was english as well, otherwise it would be an unknown track.
I had to go through every file individually and select the first audio track, it being english, which oddly it was seen as unknown though media info told me it was english and so does mkvmerge etc. What I have had happen, is track 2, the japanese track usually, is in track 1 and track 2. If you import the dvd's directly, it has no issues at all, but if you convert the tracks to mkv manually, as the conversion is horribly slow in tmpeg and does not allow anywhere near the options of x264 even though it is included in the program, it will not select the first audio track as the first audio track.
#Tmpgenc video mastering works 5 mkv full
I am trying to move my anime over to bluray, as I want to have full series on 1 disc instead of the 5-7 they normally take. It also appears to have some issues with mkv with dual audio tracks. It's questionable if it ever reaches the developers based on my previous experience with TMPGEnc technical support. I have sent a request to TMPGEnc technical support to include subtitle import in TAW5 and also pointed out the way TAW5 handles imported subtitles. They become fully transparent once imported in TAW5. I have subtitles with a transparent plate behing the text. When importing Blu-ray or AVCHD file structures with subtitles, TAW5 doesn't keep the transparency in the subtitles as expected. TAW5 can only import SRT subtitles, with the exception of importing Blu-ray, AVCHD or DVD where the existing subtitles are imported. What is missing, and was missing in TAW4, is the ability to import SUP Blu-ray subtitles as well as DVD-SUP (SUP/IFO) and VobSub (SUB/IDX) subtitles directly. It's way faster to encode the video separately with x264 and then importing to TAW5.Īs far as I have tested, "AVCHD for DVD" plays fine on Panasonic BD30. The encoding (using x264) is painfully slow in TAW5.