Ripping Blu-ray movies
- Kionon
- I ♥ the 80's
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Re: Ripping Blu-ray movies
GreenT is a Mac editor, but failed to mention that fact. I will have an answer on how to rip BDs on a Mac soon. All AviSynth information should remain valid.
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- Joined: Tue Dec 25, 2007 8:26 am
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Re: Ripping Blu-ray movies
For the process of dealing with remuxing the thing:
wine eac3to.exe 00001.m2ts remuxed.mkv
eac3to is a windows app but frankly it's about the best you have. tsmuxer is another alternative to remuxing to mkv (runs natively in OSX) however it doesn't always work due to some random finicky things. It also only runs in Leopard.
wine eac3to.exe 00001.m2ts remuxed.mkv
eac3to is a windows app but frankly it's about the best you have. tsmuxer is another alternative to remuxing to mkv (runs natively in OSX) however it doesn't always work due to some random finicky things. It also only runs in Leopard.
- The Non-Professional
- Joined: Mon Oct 15, 2001 9:21 pm
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Re: Ripping Blu-ray movies
@Qyot27: Thank you sososososososoo much for the help, I really appreciate it. I followed the steps and have a few more questions
1) Should my computer only recognize the m2ts file as audio, every program seems to think it is besides VLC which is the only thing thatll play it right now
2) once ive changed the m2ts file to mkv, should the file only be a few kbs big?
3) When I try making the script in avisynth, would the problem in the first question be the reason avisynth is saying no video file is found?
1) Should my computer only recognize the m2ts file as audio, every program seems to think it is besides VLC which is the only thing thatll play it right now
2) once ive changed the m2ts file to mkv, should the file only be a few kbs big?
3) When I try making the script in avisynth, would the problem in the first question be the reason avisynth is saying no video file is found?
- The Non-Professional
- Joined: Mon Oct 15, 2001 9:21 pm
- Location: Maybe on earth, maybe in the future
Re: Ripping Blu-ray movies
you'll have to excuse my last post, for Im an idiot, I think I didnt have something properly installed, so i went back, re installed some stuff, and now it all works dandy, thanks again for the help :DD
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Re: Ripping Blu-ray movies
For the record, your PC would read the m2ts file as audio only if libavformat is your default m2ts demuxer, which it shouldn't be if Haali's splitter is installed. libavformat breaks on m2ts and messes with seeking amongst other things. Do yourself a favour and uninstall VLC as well, there is no reason to have it besides for streaming crap or breaking playback and looking silly on the internet.
- Snowcrash
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Re: Ripping Blu-ray movies
Just a little question : mkvtoolnix (mkvmerge) doesn't allow to remux a .m2ts file from BR into a mkv ?
- mirkosp
- The Absolute Mudman
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Re: Ripping Blu-ray movies
I think it cannot handle direct remux, no.Snowcrash wrote:Just a little question : mkvtoolnix (mkvmerge) doesn't allow to remux a .m2ts file from BR into a mkv ?
You can, however, demux the tracks and remux them if they are supported. Afaik, it still does not handle SUP subtitles yet, for example. But video and audio should be fine.
- Zero1
- Joined: Fri Jan 02, 2004 12:51 pm
- Location: Sheffield, United Kingdom
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Re: Ripping Blu-ray movies
I should probably read the thread, but I'm just heading out for work and I'm wondering since those posts were made, if there have been any developments.
Basically I'm wondering if there is a BD equivalent to the excellent DVD Decrypter, that is something simple to use, automatically obtains the keys and dumps the raw files on the HDD (just like how you used to get a bunch of vobs and then index them and serve with avisynth).
It's not for me personally, but I will end up passing this information on to a friend who wants to rip a bluray, so simply switching out DVD Decrypter with a Bluray equivalent would be great.
I presume that DGIndex would now be obsolete and although I haven't been in the encoding circle for a good 3 years at least, I gather there is an AVC version. So I'd replace my current version with that, and the process should be much the same as ripping/encoding DVDs right?
I had a quick look at some software but the one I found seemed you had to enter your own keys. The bluray in question is K-ON!! Volume 9 which isn't even released yet (shipping early apparently), so we'll have no way of finding the keys or anything.
Sorry for the hasty post, but I'm short on time and really out of the loop.
Basically I'm wondering if there is a BD equivalent to the excellent DVD Decrypter, that is something simple to use, automatically obtains the keys and dumps the raw files on the HDD (just like how you used to get a bunch of vobs and then index them and serve with avisynth).
It's not for me personally, but I will end up passing this information on to a friend who wants to rip a bluray, so simply switching out DVD Decrypter with a Bluray equivalent would be great.
I presume that DGIndex would now be obsolete and although I haven't been in the encoding circle for a good 3 years at least, I gather there is an AVC version. So I'd replace my current version with that, and the process should be much the same as ripping/encoding DVDs right?
I had a quick look at some software but the one I found seemed you had to enter your own keys. The bluray in question is K-ON!! Volume 9 which isn't even released yet (shipping early apparently), so we'll have no way of finding the keys or anything.
Sorry for the hasty post, but I'm short on time and really out of the loop.
7-zip // x264 (Sharktooth's builds) // XviD (Koepi's builds) // MP4box (celtic_druid's builds) // Firefox // CCCP
- mirkosp
- The Absolute Mudman
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Re: Ripping Blu-ray movies
DVDFab HD Decrypter handles both DVDs and Blu-rays. It's free and easy to use and spits out the raw unencrypted stuff from the BD like you want.
As for handling BDs, there's a number of things you can do, and I'm gonna let the choice up to you:
1) Demux the m2ts, remux the video in mkv, and load that in avisynth with ffms2.
2) Use good ol' DGMPGDec if the video is MPEG-2 (K-On!! is AVC so yeah, not a choice in this case)
3) Use DGAVCDec ─ neuron2 doesn't support it anymore and there were some quirks or whatever, so avoid that one if possible.
4) Use DGDecNV, which handles MPEG-2, AVC, and VC-1 just fine, but you need a NVidia GPU with CUDA support. Also, you'll have to donate 15 usd to neuron2 in order to use the software.
5) Use DGAVCDecDi, which uses Di-AVC in order to work (so clearly it's for AVC only). Works on any cpu, but the catch is that, aside for the donation to neuron2 to become a supporter of his (the donation does cover all his software ever, not just one, at least), you'll also have to buy the Di-AVC decoder, which is another 10 eur or so.
6) Load the m2ts directly with DSS2, though I wouldn't really recommend it.
Personally I go with 4, but in case you don't have a gpu w/ CUDA or don't want to donate the 15 bucks, I think the best choice is 1.
As for handling BDs, there's a number of things you can do, and I'm gonna let the choice up to you:
1) Demux the m2ts, remux the video in mkv, and load that in avisynth with ffms2.
2) Use good ol' DGMPGDec if the video is MPEG-2 (K-On!! is AVC so yeah, not a choice in this case)
3) Use DGAVCDec ─ neuron2 doesn't support it anymore and there were some quirks or whatever, so avoid that one if possible.
4) Use DGDecNV, which handles MPEG-2, AVC, and VC-1 just fine, but you need a NVidia GPU with CUDA support. Also, you'll have to donate 15 usd to neuron2 in order to use the software.
5) Use DGAVCDecDi, which uses Di-AVC in order to work (so clearly it's for AVC only). Works on any cpu, but the catch is that, aside for the donation to neuron2 to become a supporter of his (the donation does cover all his software ever, not just one, at least), you'll also have to buy the Di-AVC decoder, which is another 10 eur or so.
6) Load the m2ts directly with DSS2, though I wouldn't really recommend it.
Personally I go with 4, but in case you don't have a gpu w/ CUDA or don't want to donate the 15 bucks, I think the best choice is 1.
- Zero1
- Joined: Fri Jan 02, 2004 12:51 pm
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Re: Ripping Blu-ray movies
Thanks for the big help. Looks like DVDfab will be the one to replace DVD decrypter for the file dumping stage, and I'll replace my current DGIndex with DGDecNV. Process wise, the steps the ought to be more or less the same as dealing with DVDs, just with slightly different software right? Sounds ideal. I've got various methods of demuxing (tsmuxer which I assume will work for bluray files) and also graphedit, which providing you can view the file in directshow, you can connect it to a raw file writer and use haali to demux.
Thanks I really appreciate it, now I've gotta try these out and see what the deal is.
Thanks I really appreciate it, now I've gotta try these out and see what the deal is.
7-zip // x264 (Sharktooth's builds) // XviD (Koepi's builds) // MP4box (celtic_druid's builds) // Firefox // CCCP