Greg Penetrante
December 22nd, 2006, 08:06 PM
Hello,
For those of us who edit 1080i60 jobs and then have to produce SD DVDs with said assets, did you ever notice how HORRIBLE the downconverts look when using Compressor or FCP?
For example, horizontal lines become 'fuzzy' and pixels look blocky and aliased when looking at a 100% zoom of the downconverted frame. Strange interlacing artifacts become apparent when observing motion.
Logic would dictate that downscaling an HD image would make great SD. NOT SO. It seems Compressor's downsizer has issues with interlaced material. Downrezzing with FCP into a anamorphic DV50 timeline looks a little bit better, but not as pristine as if the job was shot in SD to begin with. Perhaps After Effects may do a better job -- I don't know.
My client needed SD and HD versions of his project. And he complained loudly of the quality difference between an SD-originated project and an SD Downconverted project. I tend to agree: Apple/FCP/whatever does a lousy job of downsizing HD 1080i to NTSC.
The ONLY Software solution that did a decent job of downrezzing was Sorenson Squeeze 4.3. Its downreszzed mpeg-2 streams look much better than Compressor's. And Squeeze took half the time that Compressor did on the same HD asset (4hrs vs. 8hrs) when using single-pass VBR.
After more research and experimentation, I came across the best looking solution to downconverting. It was sitting right in front me: AJA Kona LHe Hardware Downconvert straight into Pioneer DVR-320 DVD Recorder via s-video. Duh!
The Pioneer's mpeg-2 encoder looks pretty close to Apple's when doing interlaced material. All I do is take the resulting DVDR, rip the mpeg/ac3 streams into DVD Studio Pro and finish the authoring. The cool thing about the Pioneer 320 is that I can customize the bitrate to fit the exact TRT of my program.
The nice benefit of hardware downconvert/encoding is that it happens in real time. Minimal fussing or waiting. The only downfall is the D/A->A/D conversion stage when going to the Pioneer.
If anybody else has solutions please feel free to post 'em ;-) Merry Christmas...
-Greg
For those of us who edit 1080i60 jobs and then have to produce SD DVDs with said assets, did you ever notice how HORRIBLE the downconverts look when using Compressor or FCP?
For example, horizontal lines become 'fuzzy' and pixels look blocky and aliased when looking at a 100% zoom of the downconverted frame. Strange interlacing artifacts become apparent when observing motion.
Logic would dictate that downscaling an HD image would make great SD. NOT SO. It seems Compressor's downsizer has issues with interlaced material. Downrezzing with FCP into a anamorphic DV50 timeline looks a little bit better, but not as pristine as if the job was shot in SD to begin with. Perhaps After Effects may do a better job -- I don't know.
My client needed SD and HD versions of his project. And he complained loudly of the quality difference between an SD-originated project and an SD Downconverted project. I tend to agree: Apple/FCP/whatever does a lousy job of downsizing HD 1080i to NTSC.
The ONLY Software solution that did a decent job of downrezzing was Sorenson Squeeze 4.3. Its downreszzed mpeg-2 streams look much better than Compressor's. And Squeeze took half the time that Compressor did on the same HD asset (4hrs vs. 8hrs) when using single-pass VBR.
After more research and experimentation, I came across the best looking solution to downconverting. It was sitting right in front me: AJA Kona LHe Hardware Downconvert straight into Pioneer DVR-320 DVD Recorder via s-video. Duh!
The Pioneer's mpeg-2 encoder looks pretty close to Apple's when doing interlaced material. All I do is take the resulting DVDR, rip the mpeg/ac3 streams into DVD Studio Pro and finish the authoring. The cool thing about the Pioneer 320 is that I can customize the bitrate to fit the exact TRT of my program.
The nice benefit of hardware downconvert/encoding is that it happens in real time. Minimal fussing or waiting. The only downfall is the D/A->A/D conversion stage when going to the Pioneer.
If anybody else has solutions please feel free to post 'em ;-) Merry Christmas...
-Greg