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BEST COMPRESSION FOR DVD

HI,

I want to find out the BEST compression setting for a FCP project that is 1hr and 41min. I'm burning it to a DVD that is 120min long. It's NOT HD. And it's going to be shown on a wall when it's finished. What are the best settings for this?


Thank you for your help.


Andy

Posted on Apr 16, 2014 10:15 AM

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Question marked as Best reply

Posted on Apr 16, 2014 10:34 AM

#42 - Quick and dirty way to author a DVD


Shane's Stock Answer #42 - David Roth Weiss' Secret Quick and Dirty Way to Author a DVD:


The absolute simplest way to make a DVD using FCP and DVDSP is as follows:


1. Export a QT movie, either a reference file or self contained using current settings.


2. Open DVDSP, select the "graphical" tab and you will see two little monitors, one blue, one green.


3. Select the left blue one and hit delete.


4. Now, select the green one, right click on it and select the top option "first play".


5. Now drag your QT from the browser and drop it on top of the green monitor.


6. Now, for a DVD from an HD source, look to the right side and select the "general tab" in the track editor, and see the Display Mode, and select "16:9 pan-scan."


7. Hit the little black and yellow burn icon at the top of the page and put a a DVD in when prompted. DVDSP will encode and burn your new DVD.


THATS ALL!!!


NOW...if you want a GOOD LOOKING DVD, instead of taking your REF movie into DVD SP, instead take it into Compressor and choose the BEST QUALITY ENCODE (2 pass VBR) that matches your show timing. Then take THAT result into DVD SP and follow the rest of the steps. Except you can choose "16:9 LETTERBOX" instead of PAN & SCAN if you want to see the entire image.

5 replies
Question marked as Best reply

Apr 16, 2014 10:34 AM in response to Andrew Halliday

#42 - Quick and dirty way to author a DVD


Shane's Stock Answer #42 - David Roth Weiss' Secret Quick and Dirty Way to Author a DVD:


The absolute simplest way to make a DVD using FCP and DVDSP is as follows:


1. Export a QT movie, either a reference file or self contained using current settings.


2. Open DVDSP, select the "graphical" tab and you will see two little monitors, one blue, one green.


3. Select the left blue one and hit delete.


4. Now, select the green one, right click on it and select the top option "first play".


5. Now drag your QT from the browser and drop it on top of the green monitor.


6. Now, for a DVD from an HD source, look to the right side and select the "general tab" in the track editor, and see the Display Mode, and select "16:9 pan-scan."


7. Hit the little black and yellow burn icon at the top of the page and put a a DVD in when prompted. DVDSP will encode and burn your new DVD.


THATS ALL!!!


NOW...if you want a GOOD LOOKING DVD, instead of taking your REF movie into DVD SP, instead take it into Compressor and choose the BEST QUALITY ENCODE (2 pass VBR) that matches your show timing. Then take THAT result into DVD SP and follow the rest of the steps. Except you can choose "16:9 LETTERBOX" instead of PAN & SCAN if you want to see the entire image.

Apr 16, 2014 12:12 PM in response to Shane Ross

I'm pretty you want letterboxed on the track inspector so if it's playing on an old 4:3 television, it'll be letterboxed. If it's playing on a correctly configured dvd player and flat screen, it'll fill the screen. I always thought pan and scan required data of some sort so the 4:3 image on a tube television would be filled with the desired area of a 16;9 image. I actually did the pan and scan 16mm version of a 70's comedy many years ago.

Apr 16, 2014 4:54 PM in response to Michael Grenadier

To quote your first sentence: "I'm pretty you want letterboxed on the track inspector so if it's playing on an old 4:3 television, it'll be letterboxed."


Because you left out the comma after "I'm pretty," I'm not going to say you are right. I mean, you ARE pretty...and he does want letterboxed. But without the comma, it's a confusing sentence.


🙂

BEST COMPRESSION FOR DVD

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