![]() Keeping the amount of loss unnoticeably low may require more bitrate than the original video, except for a video encoder which is far more efficient than hardware encoders in consumer cameras. MPEG-4 AVC = H.264 or MPEG-H HEVC = H.265), every conversion will reduce the quality further. When the video is compressed into a lossy format (e.g. ![]() In general: To not lose any quality, you would have to not convert the video at all. Also, using mediainfo I'm seeing that, even on lossless, there are some differences in the reported bitrate.Ĭould anyone give me a bit of an education as to what I am seeing here? ![]() I'm a little confused by how this is working to say the least. I'm also noticing that some files seem to output marginally larger form the original but then others are smaller. I understand that if I put it down to 0 (lossless) i should see a great increase in filesize because of the way its unpacking the video and then re-encoding but with lossless compression. I've been playing with the quality slider to get the right settings so that i do not lose any quality and observed that after I get past a certain point (around 12) I don't see any difference in the file size so seem to hit a wall on the quality front. That much I understand and I've done it successfully. To edit it using a trial version of premiere pro, I've had to convert it using handbrake to constant frame rate as well as changinc the audio to AAC from PCM. I've shot some HD video footage using a consumer grade camera which has resulted in a variable frame rate. ![]() I've registered today because I'm a little confused by the behaviour of handbrake and the quality settings I can select. ![]()
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