![]() In case you are planning to watch those files on PC only, there are good chances to avoid resizing and just set DAR (if your encoding software doesn't support it, there are utilities like mpeg4modifier for doing it after). you can crop the source DVD file to 704 before resizing (usually there are just black borders). *standards of digitizing analog video (also followed by DVD makers) want a slight correction: not 720 but 704 ( exactly 702 for PAL) horizontal pixels correspond to edge of a 4:3 or 16:9 image, e.g. 1024x576) and resize what you have (720x576) to those planned numbers, most devices will show video in correct AR. Most avi files are displayed in proportions determined by horizontal/vertical pixel numbers, so if you select target pixel numbers in 16:9 ratio (e.g. Your target file type or display device not necessarily will support this type of setting DAR. ![]() In case of DVD mpeg there are just 2 versions of DAR (4:3 and 16:9) and a separate (and completely independent) 1-bit parameter is used in mpeg headers to tell the player which of the 2 ways should it display the pixels stored in file*. All you need for correct resizing is to know in what proportion (DAR) the number of pixels stored in your image file should be shown. ![]() Once again that useless invention called PAR causes misunderstanding and errors. My question: How can I manage to choose the recommended display size or, should I use a different tool to have more influence on the encoding results or, how do I get a highly compressed h.264 file combined with an aac-he audio stream (since XMediaRecode doesn't support that)? Trying to get a similar result using MeGUI, which was called a "professional" tool by the german Magazine CHIP (maybe because you have to mess around with some avisynth-options) I have no chance to get the "recommended display size" to an aspect ratio of 16:9, which results in ugly eggheads: When I do the easy way using XMediaRecode, I receive a fine result, keeping the correct aspect ratio, as stated in GSpots d-section under "dar": Using any player it is displayed in 16:9 although the original format is 5:4. I recorded a part of the CloneWars Series via DVB-T, so I got an MPEG2-Stream, which was, as GSpot stated DVD-compatible. ![]() I have a problem which has probably to do with some avisynth settings, but since I'm not too familiar with all that video stuff, I do not know where to "turn the knobs" to achieve the wanted results: ![]()
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