![]() ![]() if you have a chance, compare the vhs and dvd of the same material, and you will see the difference. the average vhs recorder, especially when being several decades old, is by no means able to get any proper quality out of a tape, which is not such a great medium to begin with. The key for vhs is the process of digitalizing. i myself encode bluray movies to 1/20 of the original size with good image quality using handbrake. they usually are very lowly compressed, which leaves converter programs a big wiggle room. In general it is true, that handbrake (utilizing the new h265 codec) can reduce the filesize of a video dramatically without significant quality loss, but that goes only for high quality input material, such as dvd or blurays. improving the quality of such a video on the pc, with whatever program or codec, is a nightmare. Vhs, when digitalized, offer a very poor video quality as well as a generally very grainy, noisy picture, not to mention artifacts, deinterlacing etc. I have been working with handbrake and h265 as well as with digitalizing vhs extensively, and my experience is this:
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |