OK, time for some background here.
FIVE YEARS AGO, when I was in high school, I was getting into anime via old school tape subbing. First thing I got ALL of was Sailor Moon, cause I'm a big freakin Moonie. Go look at my top 10 anime list

Anyways, I have a capture card handy because my dad used it to watch TV on his computer. And I have a whole bunch of Master tapes from VKLL with all of Sailor Moon on it. And before I got all my tapes, I had been driving myself nuts trying to find downloadable fansubs online, which all looked like total ASS, 160x120 with awful sound, so you couldn't even read the damn subs. And I'm a system administrator at my high school, with my own little boxen sitting in the server room.
Hmmm...
So I decide to start doing encodes of the tapes. This was back in '98 I think when I started doing it, which is about concurrent with the other two groups which were doing it at the time, Parasite Anime, and another group who turns out was here at UCI at the time who did digital encodes of Kenshin fansubs and distroed on CD. So we all started doing the same thing hardcore at around the same time, and we were all using the same tools - RealProducer G2.
Keep in mind, G2 was freakin' STATE of the ART when I started this. DivX was still just a brand new DRM-protected DVD format, and everyone was still on modems (I was mostly too, during that time). So when I started making my encodes at... jesus how big were my files? Lemme see if the CDs I burned 4 years ago still work... Yup they work! 36MB an episode. And wow that was burned on one of the 80 minute CDs that I bought specially from MicroMedia in San Jose because you couldn't get 80 min CDs anywhere else and they let all of a season fit on 2 CDs instead of 3. Oh the memories.
Anyways, so when I started making encodes at 36MB an episode, this was freaking HUGE. INSANELY large. People complained my encodes were too big. But I refused to make them any smaller, because while at this resolution they sure weren't perfect, they were watchable. I actually went through two different capture cards, the latter being my Asus V3800 Deluxe with Video-in, which I still have sitting on my desk here (trusty old video card hasn't failed me yet, although its drivers have - Asus never made working Win2K drivers for it, so no capture in 2K for me).
Anyways, over the course of like a year I would post another 2 or 4 episodes to my site every week. By the end of it I blew through:
Sailor Moon episodes 2,5,6,20,42,44,45,46 (the first season episodes either removed entirely, or edited down into a single episode like 45 and 46)
Sailor Moon R episodes 73-89 (the "lost episodes", which then later were dubbed and I removed from my site).
Sailor Moon S episodes 90-126 (whole season)
Sailor Moon SuperS episodes 127-167 (whole season)
Sailor Moon Sailor Stars 168-200 (whole season)
Sailor Moon SuperS Specials, and Ami-chan no Hatsukoi
and all three movies (even the Black Dream Hole one which blew ass, R was totally the best movie).
Then I moved on to Macross 7, did all 49 episodes of that plus the movie, and then I merged with Parasite Anime to form Fumei Anime, whose site is still up albeit woefully out of date. You'll see my name on there as well.
For Fumei I started out doing encodes of other shows, and I began using DivX3 when it was all brand new. Everyone was saying that it was all illegal and I shouldn't be using it but the thing was GREAT. If you find any encodes of Tenshi ni Narumon in DivX3, those were all Fumei Anime done by me, same with all the Hana Yori Dango encodes and a bunch of other random stuff which I encoded for Fumei like the first Detective Conan movie and the Gekiganger 3 OVA. But then the tape fansub scene just dried up in the face of digisubbing, and I began squirming my way into that community later on (as DrasticMouse, for those who don't know, I did a bunch of HQA, AI, and all of ANBU's early stuff).
So there's my brief history of anime encoding. As you can see, I've been doing this a DAMN long time - I was here for the beginning of anime fansubs online. That's one of the reasons I'm so damn knowledgable about video encoding, cause I've been DOING it forever.

So if you look at those old encodes and cringe: fear not, I do as well. But you know what? They were DAMN good five years ago.
Ahh nostalgia.
And thanks to Tim for pointing me to this thread.