Steve78 Posted May 2, 2017 Posted May 2, 2017 Hi all, what would be the easiest way to rip a DVD so that each track is a separate file - AVI or whatever? It's not a commercial DVD, I'm burning separate recordings to DVD on an old Panasonic DVD recorder so that I can finally get rid of my VHS cassettes, sell the VCR and free up some space. I can't afford to buy commercial software to do this, it will need to be freeware. Thanks in advance
Full Range Posted May 2, 2017 Posted May 2, 2017 In the past I used a free software program called DVD Shrink Now I know as software is updated some things get better and others removed So have a look at it a see if it suits you
~Spyne~ Posted May 3, 2017 Posted May 3, 2017 DVD Shrink was fabulous! I think Handbrake is now the go-to freeware for this sort of thing.
Guest rmpfyf Posted May 3, 2017 Posted May 3, 2017 Handbrake. The other option is to have something rip it to one file and then use a second utility to split that into bits that you want. Anything based on ffmpeg is going to be fast, free and extremely good.... like https://sourceforge.net/projects/ffmpegyag/ http://www.avanti.arrozcru.org/ http://www.myffmpeg.com/
Steve78 Posted May 3, 2017 Author Posted May 3, 2017 Thanks for the replies, I better look into Handbrake. If anyone else has any suggestions I'm all ears. By the way Spyne, are you the same Spyne from the old MEA? 1
~Spyne~ Posted May 3, 2017 Posted May 3, 2017 50 minutes ago, Steve78 said: By the way Spyne, are you the same Spyne from the old MEA? *taps nose*
Steve78 Posted June 13, 2017 Author Posted June 13, 2017 (edited) Have downloaded Handbrake, thanks for the suggestions. What settings should I use to encode MP4s if the original content came from video tape? I tried 'Fast 720p30' and it worked but took forever and the files were too big (eg 400mb for a 15 minute clip). And I assume that video tapes are 24 fps but none of the presets match this. The encoded file seems to look more jittery, especially when the camera is panning. The screenshot shows the available presets. Also some of the footage has our old band rehearsing - is there anything wrong with choosing a lowish video resolution together with a high audio bitrate like 320kb/s (in the audio tab) so I don't lose too much audio quality? Edited June 13, 2017 by Steve78
~Spyne~ Posted June 13, 2017 Posted June 13, 2017 What is the current format of the captured VHS video / how was it captured originally?
Steve78 Posted June 14, 2017 Author Posted June 14, 2017 Thanks for your help, I have no idea with this stuff. Current format: On DVD+R discs, recorded on a Panasonic tuner/HDD/DVD recorder. I'm not sure what format the machine uses, but the discs it makes are playable on any standard DVD player. Original capture: Some was from old analogue broadcast TV (sports news with family members that I want to keep), the rest was recorded on 1990s era consumer grade handycams.
~Spyne~ Posted June 14, 2017 Posted June 14, 2017 Hmmm, I would guess the format is MPEG-2 (on the DVD-R discs)...but that is just a guess. I find Handbrake pretty slow when I use it, though I've never tried with VHS source material before. Have a read about detelecining, deinterlacing and denoising...or just try a few different settings and compare what you get out. link 1 link 2
fowlerd303 Posted June 15, 2017 Posted June 15, 2017 When I convert my DVD's I generally first rip the disc to an ISO or VOBs temporarily to my hard drive. I find that it's then quicker to convert those files rather than from the disc. I use SmartRipper for that. For the conversion I have my own preset. I leave the source size the same (720x576 for PAL), Under the Filters tab I turn Deinterlace on. Container I use MKV, codec H.264, Constant Quality 21. Under Audio it's up to you, for DVD's I usually do an AC3 passthough and stereo MP3 so I have two audio choices depending on the device I'm watching them on.
Steve78 Posted June 17, 2017 Author Posted June 17, 2017 Thanks for the info guys, I'll have another try soon
BATMAQN Posted June 17, 2017 Posted June 17, 2017 Excellent software have used it for years in conjunction with VLC just excellent. 400 MB for a fifteen minute file may seem like a lot but storage is so cheap nowadays, the smaller you go the software will take out bits it considers not necessary you don't really get to choose what that will be I found not reducing the file size gave much better results reliability wise and all round quality up to you I guess.
Guest rmpfyf Posted June 25, 2017 Posted June 25, 2017 Late response, sorry. Am converting a stack of old media, thought it valuable to share. @Steve78, @fowlerd303 is broadly correct on the resolution coming off the DVD - your screenshot suggests the DVDs are PAL encoded (720x576), which would be 25 frames/sec - so any of the 576p25 presets will do (would use the HQ). Anything more is wasted and won't necessarily look better. if your original source is VHS you don't need to go nuts on resolution, there's maybe 240 lines of usable video content there. S-VHS will bump this to 400 lines. Your best approach IMHO is to have it rip in the DVD video format and then postprocess it to something lower res from there if it suits, and maybe to apply deinterlacing if not already done in the original conversion to DVD.. You're welcome to go 320kbps for the audio tracks, assuming the deck used to record/master them was using HiFi VHS (should sound about CD-quality) - otherwise response is around 10Hz-10kHz and worse on copies (linear audio mode) - if you've got the second, there are ways of encoding your file to save a bit of space. I'd use Handbrake to do the above, then ffmpeg to transcode to something you like. You can deinterlace at this stage too - I'd play around with it, see what looks best - you're a little at the mercy of the original conversion to DVD here. Unless you're playing back on something super-new that does h265, I'd suggest h264 compression in an mp4 file and the audio as aac. If interested, let me know and I'll describe what you need to do in ffmpeg.
Guest rmpfyf Posted June 29, 2017 Posted June 29, 2017 1 hour ago, Steve78 said: Thanks rmpfyf! Cheers mate. If you want to try the ffmpeg route after you've got something ripped, shout out. If you like you can upload a short video somewhere and I can see what I could do with it for compression.
murgles Posted September 1, 2017 Posted September 1, 2017 (edited) DVD Decrypyter can be used to rip a DVD into separate files based on chapters, so assuming each song is separated by chapter then this process will work: Firstly, open DVD Decrypter and select Tools --> Settings --> IFO Mode. Under "File Splittings" select "By Chapter". Then click "OK" Secondly, click on Mode --> IFO You will be given a list of chapters. Tick the chapters you want to rip. Then rip your DVD. Edited September 1, 2017 by murgles 1
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