For those of you that torrent video files this question is geared toward you. I’m looking for a sweet spot between quality, size & speed for HEVC encoding. I’m using FastFlix and seem to be getting really wide and varying speeds.

I’m not really literate on all this video lingo but I can, at least, get it going. Most files take anywhere from 5-17 mins for a 30-40 mins clip. I have a AMD Radeon RX 470 graphics card but when I try and use the VCEEnc it won’t let me use CRF which I’ve heard it the best way.

Anyway, if you’re willing to share knowledge or what settings you use when you convert video to HEVC that might help me speed up my processing, I would be eternally grateful.

  • Zedstrian@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    3 days ago

    In most cases, most release groups already fine tune encoding settings towards various balances of file size and quality, so the best option is to decide on a set of release group whose standards meet your needs and just use the files as they come without further modification.

    Applying lossy compression to a video that’s already had lossy compression applied to it degrades it unnecessarily, so if you’re going to compress it yourself, it’s best to start with the remux, aka the original media file.

    I’d personally recommend releases from members of the qxr group and Vyndros.

    • Rodrigo_de_Mendoza@lemmy.dbzer0.comOP
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      3 days ago

      I understand about reencoding and I’ve gotten a lot of flak about that from a lot of people but as I mentioned above it’s more of a space issue with me also. I appreciate the mention of groups to look to as that helps much. Thanks for your input!

      • Tabitha ☢️[she/her]@hexbear.net
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        3 days ago

        IDK I’d assume anything uploaded more than 10 years ago needs to be re-encoded (but you should learn more about the old and new encodings before generalizing that blindly).

        I’ve also had success removing embedded language audio tracks from a file that had 5+ languages from the original Blu-ray. Each language was over 1GB/per movie for a specific offending collection.

        • Rodrigo_de_Mendoza@lemmy.dbzer0.comOP
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          2 days ago

          I think that’s part of my problems I have new stuff and stuff waaayyy over 10 years old and I’m trying to find a “sweet spot” for everything and I don’t think that’s possible. Yeah, I know what you mean about the additional language, audio, etc. tracks especially in stuff I get from Nyaa. I tend to batch demux a lot of that out before I even start messing around with re-encoding the file. Thanks for your input!