Well I was backing up a DVD and I was using the XVID guide on Doom9.org (just to see what it was like. I have no real need to.) and a funny thing happened.
The file was about 613 megs (for the audio and video) , the CD's I have are 700. So I decided to try and get the movie a bit bigger to fit the size of the DVD. I did several 2 pass encodes and they never got bigger than 604 megs. Eventually I said 'screw it' and did single pass CBR encodes. Heres the funny part. I did a 6500 7500 8500 and 9000 bitrate encodes all within megabytes of each other. The size increase went from 633 at 6500 to 634 at 9000. Anyone know why that is?
Trying to get the filesize of a video up
- CaTaClYsM
- Joined: Fri Jul 26, 2002 3:54 am
Trying to get the filesize of a video up
So in other words, one part of the community is waging war on another part of the community because they take their community seriously enough to want to do so. Then they tell the powerless side to get over the loss cause it's just an online community. I'm glad people make so much sense." -- Tab
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Re: Trying to get the filesize of a video up
Because the bitrate you set does not have a linear correlation to the final file size. If you were to plot encode size as a function of bitrate for a particular data set, you'd probably find it to loosely resemble an exponential curve that is asymptotic to some encode size. (Note "loosely resemble", as I doubt that the function would be exponential in nature, not knowing enough about the specific transforms involved.)CaTaClYsM wrote:Well I was backing up a DVD and I was using the XVID guide on Doom9.org (just to see what it was like. I have no real need to.) and a funny thing happened.
The file was about 613 megs (for the audio and video) , the CD's I have are 700. So I decided to try and get the movie a bit bigger to fit the size of the DVD. I did several 2 pass encodes and they never got bigger than 604 megs. Eventually I said 'screw it' and did single pass CBR encodes. Heres the funny part. I did a 6500 7500 8500 and 9000 bitrate encodes all within megabytes of each other. The size increase went from 633 at 6500 to 634 at 9000. Anyone know why that is?
Most likely, the encoder simply isn't finding any more data to work with, or at least, any more data of consequence.
Filling up 634 / 700 megabytes should be good enough...
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Re: Trying to get the filesize of a video up
It will only use the full bitrate if the scene needs that many bits.CaTaClYsM wrote:The size increase went from 633 at 6500 to 634 at 9000. Anyone know why that is?
What you have is maximum quality at those settings - there is no way of making it bigger without:
1) higher resolution
2) quantizer 1
3) turning off space saving options such as b-frames, gcm, qpel lumi masking etc etc
In short, don't complain... it's as nice looking as you are going to get.
- CaTaClYsM
- Joined: Fri Jul 26, 2002 3:54 am
Time to UP THE RESOLUTION!
So in other words, one part of the community is waging war on another part of the community because they take their community seriously enough to want to do so. Then they tell the powerless side to get over the loss cause it's just an online community. I'm glad people make so much sense." -- Tab