Blog

Archive for June 26th, 2009

How much CAN you fit on a DVD?

Friday, June 26th, 2009

A common question that clients always ask is “How much footage can I fit on a DVD?”. The glib answer is “As much as you want”, but it’s always good to try and back this up with some cold hard facts.

Often you will find on the packaging of blank media a duration of some sort. This is partly a throwback to the days of CD-Rs where the duration given was in fact how much Audio you could record to the disc. Audio has a fixed data rate and so there was always a direct relationship between the size of the disc (650Mb, 700Mb) and the amount of CD Audio you store (74 minutes, 80 minutes). With DVD VIDEO the data rate is variable and so when a blank DVD suggests a running time, this is usually based on a generic “quality” setting on set-top DVD Recorders – EP, SP, LP, HQ, SHQ etc. which are consumer speak for average data rates.

In actual fact, the easiest way to look at a DVD (or any kind of media) is as a ‘bit bucket’ – an object which can hold a certain amount of bits of Data. You have a certain amount of information you want to include on the disc and so you have to do a bit budget. It’s not different from doing any sort of budget.

There are probably lots of different ways to calculate a bit budget for a project, but the following was the way I was originally taught, using figures I was originally told. At some point, someone probably read them in either DVD Demystified or some other user guide…

A single-sided, single layer DVD (also known as a DVD-5) contains 36,096 Megabits of space (taking into account a little bit of headroom). Note that the value is Megabits not Megabytes. We use this measurement as we wish to calculate how many Megabits per second we have to describe our video.

A single-sided, dual layered DVD (DVD-9) contains 65,280 Megabits of space.

The first thing we need to do is add up the durations of all our footage (If you’ve only got a couple of moving menus, we ignore these as we’ll be rounding down figures for safety). Next, we need to convert this duration into seconds.

Let’s say we have 2 hours of footage to go on a DVD-5.

1. 120 minutes x 60 seconds = 7200 seconds of content.

Our audio is at a constant rate, so for example if we have 1 Dolby Digital audio track at 224Kbps:

2. 0.224 Megabits per second multiplied by 7200 seconds = 1612.8 Megabits just for the Audio.
3. 36096 Megabits minus 1612.8 Megabits = 34483.2 Megabits left over for our Video.
4. 34483.2 Megabits divided by 7200 seconds = 4.7893 Megabits per second.

So our average bit rate for our Video should be 4.7Mbps. If we were doing a CBR (Constant Bit Rate) encode that would be it, but you should get far better quality if you do a VBR (Variable Bit Rate) encode, which means that as long as the average across the length of the footage is 4.7Mbps, the encoder can go higher when it needs to compress really tricky video, it then needs to go lower at the easy bits to make savings in the budget.

For a VBR encode, you need to be able to tell your encoder what it’s peak or maximum bit rate is. The DVD VIDEO specification says that your combined Video and Audio cannot go any higher than 9.8Mbps, in which case your maximum Video bit rate would be 9.8Mbps minus your audio (0.224 Mbps) giving you 9.576Mbps for this example. Personally, I would never go above 9Mbps, and on a lot of titles will set my maximum to 8.5Mbps. The fact of the matter is you don’t know what kind of player you will be playing your disc back on, and some cheaper / older players might struggle if you max out your video encoding. Far better to have a safety margin than an issue with a title, because quoting the specification will fall on deaf ears at that point…

Remember that the data rate of your audio will vary depending on how many audio tracks you include, and what type of audio they produce. A number of encoders produce PCM audio by default which in an uncompressed state can take the best part of 1.7Mbps of space. Had we used PCM audio on the above job we would have given you an average video bit rate of 3.3Mbps.

Getting your CD recognised on-line

Friday, June 26th, 2009

Please follow the instructions below to add track names to the CD database.

Insert CD in to iTunes
Right click on to the first track and select info.

This will then give you the possibility to fill in the track details. Please
repeat this for each individual track.

Once you are happy with your track labelling, select from the tool bar
“Advance” and then select submit CD Track names.

And thats it! Please give iTunes about 24h to add the data to their
database.

The system identifies the CD based on the length and order of the tracks.
This means if one song is ripped of the disc it will no longer recognise
that song from its database.

You know you’re passionate about DVDs when…

Friday, June 26th, 2009

Ok, as we might have mentioned, we are big fans of DVD.

So, the question is, how much of a fan are you? Take this test to find out….

1. You’d rather not lend DVDs to friends or colleague/ Even when you do, you never lend it in it’s original packaging.

2. You check out photos of people’s DVD collections online.

3. You’ve catalogued your DVD collection.

4. You’ve swapped out all of your Warner Bros titles into normal DVD cases because of your rational hatred for “snappers”.

5. No ordinary DVD will do, it has to be an Amaray branded DVD case – ying / yang release hub all the way!

6. When you pick up a DVD in the shops, you check to see if the first run had a coloured DVD case.

7. In a land of multi-region DVD Players, you check out DVDCompare.net before making a purchase.

8. If all versions are the same, you look out the one with the best packaging. Is there a steelbook version available somewhere?

9. You own one or more of the 20th Century Fox ‘head’ collections

10. If you do not like the official DVD cover artwork, you will look out alternatives – has bunnydojo done a version?

Picture Quality vs Bit Rate.

Friday, June 26th, 2009

So, in my previous article I spoke about how to calculate the bit rate for Video and Audio to get the most out of the space afforded to you on your single or dual layered DVD.

But what exactly does this data rate equate to in terms of picture quality?

The first thing to remember is that no matter what bit rate you give your footage, it will never look better than the source – the saying goes “garbage in, garbage out”, although sometimes more colourful terms are used. If you have shot your footage on a low quality camcorder, or worse VHS, then it doesn’t matter if you give it 9Mbps on a dual layered disc, it’s never going to look as something shot on a professional tape format or, better still, film. Ultimately, the best you can hope to achieve is an encode that is “transparent to master”.

The main strength in MPEG-2 compression for DVD comes from it’s use of Interpicture Compression, that is the differences between each picture. Because of the way MPEG-2 compression works, only every 12th or 15th picture is stored as an entire image. For the remaining pictures, only the differences between each image are stored.

In MPEG terms, you have what is known as a GOP or Group of Pictures:

I B B P B B P B B P B B P B B

The ‘I’ Frame is your only ‘whole’ picture of information, and provides your random access points (chapters etc). The remaining frames only contain information about the pixels that have changed.

The ‘P’ Frame is a ‘predicted’ picture, based on information from previous I and P frames.

The ‘B’ Frame is a ‘bi-directionally predicted’ picture, based on past and future frames.

Without going into too much detail, the ease of encoding your footage is down to the content – if there is a lot of fast or erratic motion – fire, water, smoke, hand held footage etc – then it is harder to compress as the changes between each picture are so much bigger and less predictable. If your footage is ’slower’ and ‘more sedate’ such as talking heads and landscapes then the changes between each frame are far less, and more predictable and so are easier to compress.

Taking this into account, if you have a low bit rate, then you are more likely to see ‘compression artifacts’ is hard to compress footage.

So, when you look at your footage and you look at your bit rate, think to yourself:

• Talking heads, not much motion at 4-5+ Mbps – I should be ok.
• Lots of fast moving action at 4-5 Mbps – That could look compresed.
• Lost of fast moving action at 6-7+Mbps – I should be ok.
• Anything less than 4Mbps – I might be trying to get too much on my DVD…

24-7 DVD

All content on this site is © 2009 24-7 DVD, a subsidary of re:fine Ltd.
Web design by Datadial