Miggy Sanchez
May 27th, 2014, 06:25 PM
Hi there
I have just started producing DVDs of Australian Rules football games of about 90 minutes duration.
With a one camera set-up, there is a lot of panning and moderate tilting.
I shoot in DV format on a Sony Z5Pand capture/ingest AVI files in Sony Vegas 10.
I just completed a batch of DVDs, encoding the AVI files as standard MPEG 2 files.
The results were adequate using the standard template for a single pass VBR encoding, and there was not one complaint.
However, I am keen to experiment a little with different compression settings to better the workflow and DVD, and to actively learn more about encoding/compression.
For example, in a high-action sport like Australian Rules football, would a Constant Bit Rate encode produce a better DVD than a Variable Bit Rate encode? If VBR is better, what should I be dialling in on the relevant settings.
Any advice or suggestions from the field are APPRECIATED.
I have just started producing DVDs of Australian Rules football games of about 90 minutes duration.
With a one camera set-up, there is a lot of panning and moderate tilting.
I shoot in DV format on a Sony Z5Pand capture/ingest AVI files in Sony Vegas 10.
I just completed a batch of DVDs, encoding the AVI files as standard MPEG 2 files.
The results were adequate using the standard template for a single pass VBR encoding, and there was not one complaint.
However, I am keen to experiment a little with different compression settings to better the workflow and DVD, and to actively learn more about encoding/compression.
For example, in a high-action sport like Australian Rules football, would a Constant Bit Rate encode produce a better DVD than a Variable Bit Rate encode? If VBR is better, what should I be dialling in on the relevant settings.
Any advice or suggestions from the field are APPRECIATED.