Best format for ripping DVDs

ZAFDeltaForce

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I'm not sure if this is the right place for this thread, so please forgive me if it isn't.

I'm planning to rip my entire DVD collection into my PC hard drive, and would like to know what the best format is for excellent sound/video quality. I've been converting my videos to Divx (.avi), but I'm open for suggestions/advice

Thanks
 

arctic_flame

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I'm not sure if this is the right place for this thread, so please forgive me if it isn't.

I'm planning to rip my entire DVD collection into my PC hard drive, and would like to know what the best format is for excellent sound/video quality. I've been converting my videos to Divx (.avi), but I'm open for suggestions/advice

Thanks

I just rip exact copies of the DVD (Into a folder with loads of *.vob files)
 

FAST6191

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Depends what you want to play them on.
Aside from speciality stuff like DPG, PSP videos for official firmware and ipods it comes down to a few things.
If for others with a DVD player I normally use something like DVDshrink/rejig to cut it down to size and kill the menus or if I have to do a lot of work I will recode the streams and possibly audio.
Other times I will just kill some of the extras hardcoded trailers and the like.
Search for vobedit, vobblanker, ifoedit and PCGedit. Some of the tools can be a bit complex (PCGedit especially) at first but once you are familiar chances are you will wonder why you did not already.
If you want to edit the subtitles in video without having to mess around too much DVDsubedit: http://www.free-codecs.com/DVDSubEdit_download.htm

I recently installed xbmc on my xbox so that has made life far nicer (my gaming rig is a bit noisy for right by the TV and it is a pain to get it there) but unfortunately it does not play well with H264 video but it does get on with MKV well enough so I normally do that. I like MKV for the names of streams, chapters, support of pretty much all formats, multiple streams as standard unlike stock AVI (I do not like hacks to the format so I tend to replace it).
See below for how I do MKV but ignore the h264 stuff and replace with whatever else if you need it.

If for my PC I use MKV with H264 and normally just srt subs as I am too lazy for ASS/SSA sub making most of the time (if it is a really nice anime then that is different).
Here I normally use
DGindex/DGdecode serve it with avisynth (and normally do any edits there) to megui.
I can go straight to MKV there but I normally make raw streams and then use MKVmerge from the MKVtoolnix packages as it is mare more adaptable and I can easily add names and whatnot.

Audio is normally HE-AAC from nero's AAC tool (it is freeware) or I might leave it as ac3 from the DVD (perhaps dropping the channels to stereo or 2.1).

Edit: xvid vs divx. They both do the same standard (for now anyway, both have said things about moving to other formats). Quality and speed wise you will be hard pushed to tell them apart. xvid has a few more options for standalone video and divx has a few more tools as well as the divx container (a tweaked avi file: so much so that renaming to .avi will allow stuff that does not support it to play it) but pretty much everything on the freeware front is geared towards xvid.
 

Kingwad

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Okay. Speaking of formats, is there a difference between Divx and Xvid? Which is better?

Since I can play Xvid videos in the DivX player and my DivX DVD player, and play DivX movies through an Xvid codec, there is effectively no difference, except that Xvid is free and open-source while DivX is proprietary and non-free.
 

herbanassault

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I assume you plan on selling your entire collection, or are you just trying to cover your ass and really what you're saying is you're going to start ripping the films you rent/borrow?

Only reason I ask is because I could not see any point in ripping your collection, that you own. Unless you own like, 20 movies, it's way more work than it will ever be worth.

That being said, XviD rules.
 

arctic_flame

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Fun fact: DivX spelt backwards is XviD

To paraphrase plagiarize wikipedia: Xvid is a primary competitor of the DivX Pro Codec (Xvid being DivX spelled backwards). In contrast with the DivX codec, which is proprietary software developed by DivX, Inc., Xvid is free software distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public License.
 

fischju

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Xvid at 1650kbs and the highest quality nets at 1.4GB file that has almost exactly the same quality as the DVD. And it will play on just about everything.
 

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