5/5/2024 0 Comments Shutter encoder vs handbrake![]() I can’t give a bitrate that works for all content. It’s recommended to tag the “max quality” checkbox if you’re doing CQ with hardware acceleration.Īfter a couple of trials of stuff with CQ settings, you will probably get to know what bitrates work well for your content, and you could keep it simple by doing VBR exports at a target bitrate. It will be cosmically “lower” quality but youtube is gonna re-encode that anyway. If you have an nvidia card, save yourself some hella time and electrons by enabling hardware acceleration. CQ 19 is basically visually lossless for a 1080p export. ![]() The CQ option is best for this, takes a lot of the guesswork out of picking a bitrate. You use those in your video editor.įor “delivery”, the stuff you upload to youtube, you’d do an export from your editor in one of those intraframe codecs, and use shutter encoder to do a decent master in something like h265. They are intra-frame codecs, low compression, very high quality on the higher settings. If you have the space for it, a mezzanine codec is best for this. Sounds like you’re making intermediate files for editing. We appreciate this nifty tool very much, and I started recommending it around my circle. Thank you to Paul for such a wonderful tool. A best settings guide will be very helpful, and I appreciate any and all responses I can get on this. Other things are compressing my final render to H.264 to upload to Youtube. My question is, what will be the best settings to do this? I delete the original file and only use these trimmed versions for my editing, so want to preserve as much quality as possible while having a lower filesize. so my big file is trimmed and compressed to a smaller file size, which I then use to edit and export these clips.and save this cut out part to a new file as "Constant Framerate Same as Source". ![]() I use the "trim" feature to cut out certain seconds (like 1:20 to 1:45).I manually import screen recordings to handbrake one by one (2K 60 FPS H264 256KBPS audio).I do a few things with Handbrake, but the most important is: If just one of those formats aren't fully supported by your playback device, you will have to re-encode it, or use some kind of 'middleware' like Plex.TV that can process your high-quality video source on the fly, so you won't have to worry about format support anymore.Hello, I have been a long term Handbrake user and only recently discovered Shutter Encoder (a pity, wish I did earlier). What matters are the encoding methods (codecs) of the video and audio tracks inside the container. Most devices handles both containers very well these days. The container (MKV, MP4) is almost never the issue. But as for the socalled 'universal compatibility', an MP4 with Dolby Atmos audio and HEVC video is just as un-playable on an older device as an MKV with Atmos and HEVC video would be. Advanced subtitles in MP4 is for example a bad idea, but Dolby Atmos and True-HD audio is supported. That will maintain the exact same video and audio quality, because remuxing (re-multiplexing) is nothing more than a copy process, where the separate tracks (video, audio and sometimes subtitles) are copied 1:1 to the destination container without any kind of modification.īe aware that MP4 has some content limitations compared to MKV. If you just want an MP4 file (or M4V for iOS devices) instead of a Matroska file, you can use a remuxing program like Shutter Encoder, Xmedia Recode or AVIdemux. That's almost doable without visible quality loss, but if you're OK with 6 gb, why bother? ![]() If you've already compressed your video to 6 gb, you should definetely not use a program like Handbrake, unless you want to compress (degrade) it even more.
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