Looks like no one’s replied in a while. To start the conversation again, simply ask a new question.

Help, iDVD doubles file size of videos?

Hi,

I'm trying to create a DVD of a video I purchased (DRM free, came with many special features loose, want to package it up) and the total file size of all videos combined is 4.05 GB. When I imported each file into iDVD, and then proceeded to attempt to finalize the video, it tells me the file size is too large, even for a dual-layer disc. I found that odd, so I checked the project info, and it tells me I hav 10.16 GB of video (not including menus, etc.). I find this extremely odd (I'm not going to lie, I've never used iDVD before so this may be normal) but I cannot figure out why this is, or if it's possible to fix! I really just want to be able to burn the 4.05 GB of video to a disc, is there any way to do that with iDVD so I can keep the menus I have?

MacBook Pro (15-inch Mid 2010), Mac OS X (10.7.5)

Posted on Sep 27, 2013 9:30 PM

Reply
2 replies

Sep 28, 2013 3:39 AM in response to NicolasFromCT

iDVD encoding settings:


http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1502?viewlocale=en_US


Short version:


Best Performance is for videos of up to 60 minutes


Best Quality is for videos of up to 120 minutes


Professional Quality is also for up to 120 minutes but even higher quality (and takes much longer)


That was for single-layer DVDs. Double these numbers for dual-layer DVDs.


Professional Quality: The Professional Quality option uses advanced two-pass technology to encode your video (The first pass determines which parts of the movie can be given greater compresson without quality loss and which parts can’t. The second pass then encodes those different parts accordingly) , resulting in the best quality of video possible on your burned DVD. You can select this option regardless of your project’s duration (up to 2 hours of video for a single-layer disc and 4 hours for a double-layer disc). Because Professional Quality encoding is time-consuming (requiring about twice as much time to encode a project as the High Quality option, for example) choose it only if you are not concerned about the time taken.


In both cases the maximum length includes titles, transitions and effects etc. Allow about 15 minutes for these.


You can use the amount of video in your project as a rough determination of which method to choose. If your project has an hour or less of video (for a single-layer disc), choose Best Performance. If it has between 1 and 2 hours of video (for a single-layer disc), choose High Quality. If you want the best possible encoding quality for projects that are up to 2 hours (for a single-layer disc), choose Professional Quality. This option takes about twice as long as the High Quality option, so select it only if time is not an issue for you.

Use the Capacity meter in the Project Info window (choose Project > Project Info) to determine how many minutes of video your project contains.

NOTE: With the Best Performance setting, you can turn background encoding off by choosing Advanced > “Encode in Background.” The checkmark is removed to show it’s no longer selected. Turning off background encoding can help performance if your system seems sluggish.


And whilst checking these settings in iDVD Preferences, make sure that the settings for NTSC/PAL and DV/DV Widescreen are also what you want.


http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1502?viewlocale=en_US

Help, iDVD doubles file size of videos?

Welcome to Apple Support Community
A forum where Apple customers help each other with their products. Get started with your Apple ID.