Ron Stoole
October 17th, 2002, 06:47 PM
Can someone tell me what is the best MPEG 2 encoder available, under about $1200?
Thanks
Ron
Thanks
Ron
View Full Version : What's the best MPEG 2 Encoder Ron Stoole October 17th, 2002, 06:47 PM Can someone tell me what is the best MPEG 2 encoder available, under about $1200? Thanks Ron Jeff Donald October 17th, 2002, 07:09 PM What platform, Mac or PC? Jeff Jacques Mersereau October 18th, 2002, 08:17 AM Tricky question. There are hardware and software encoders. Prices go from hundreds to $30K+. Long crunches to realtime. If you want "Hollywood" results, you'll have to spend Hollywood $$$. (I don't know HOW they get almost two hours (4mbs) that looks great. Then again, they hand out oscars for this.) Part of the high end process is to use uncompressed footage (so for DV, sample it in and save off as uncompressed) run that through a $40K hardware de-noiser, then encode with 2 or 3 pass variable bit rate encoder. For us normal humans, I've heard that one of the best mpeg2 encoders is Heuris.com.'s Power Professional DVD. Long crunches, but excellent results. It was $2500, but I think it's about a grand these days. Chris Hurd October 18th, 2002, 09:34 AM The $1200 Canopus DVStorm 2 PC-based DV editing card now ships with an hardware MPEG encoding module (previously costing $400 by itself). The performance is pretty snappy, about 1.1 times real-time (a 40 minute project would render in about 45 minutes). See www.canopus.com for their MPEG encoder product line. Hope this helps, Rob Lohman October 18th, 2002, 10:59 AM One of the best software encoders (which you can both download demos off) I've seen are (for PC): 1. Cinema Craft Encoder (CCE) -> expensive, best results www.cinemacraft.com 2. TMPGEnc -> cheap, very good results www.tmpgenc.net or .com Try there demos. Both can be very frightening products at first but deliver truly amazing quality. Check out the guides on these two at doom9.org -> guides -> authoring -> encoding. You'll find guides for both there (mainly targeted at DVD ripping, but you can use their settings etc.) Good luck. Ron Stoole October 19th, 2002, 07:43 AM Thanks everyone. I downloaded the Heuris encoder and it wouldn't even run on my PC (Windows by the way) What I did see of the U/I looked patchy. But I didn't get to see what the final output was like so can't comment on that. However, I did download the TMPGenc and that is fantastic! Excellent quality and packed full of features that blow the mind. Easy to use an only $50! Also, they allow a 30 day open trial. Regards Ron Andre De Clercq October 19th, 2002, 01:01 PM TmpgEnc is wonderfull and outperforms all the "expensive" guys! Ron Stoole October 19th, 2002, 03:34 PM Also.... TMPGEnc has a multithread capability which took full advantage of the Dual processors on my machine and the 2 pass encoding was very fast. Ron Rob Lohman October 21st, 2002, 10:42 AM TMPGEnc is great indeed. Although many consider it to be too slow (CCE is a lot faster). But then again, for $50 you cannot beat that product! I'd rather wait a bit longer for sweeter quality than the other way around. MPEG compression is the last step in the process anyway, so doesn't hurt to let the PC render for a few days if needed. Justin Costanzo October 21st, 2002, 11:44 PM This is great site/page for DVD compliant MPEG2. Check it out at: http://pwp.netcabo.pt/rmn/TMPGEnc_Template.html |