How to use HandBrake For Video Conversions - Full Guide

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  • Опубликовано: 27 окт 2024

Комментарии • 24

  • @quick-tutorials
    @quick-tutorials  5 месяцев назад +2

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  • @georgecarter8104
    @georgecarter8104 11 дней назад

    Very informative and clear. Thank you.

  • @ArizonaSunsetsUSA
    @ArizonaSunsetsUSA 27 дней назад +1

    This was very helpful as I am new to HandBrake. Thank you!!

    • @quick-tutorials
      @quick-tutorials  27 дней назад

      Glad to hear it was helpful, and thank you so much for the support 🙌

  • @MohammedAadhil10
    @MohammedAadhil10 4 месяца назад

    thanks! Great video❤

  • @JackVasu
    @JackVasu Месяц назад

    Nice

  • @stnbfbf
    @stnbfbf 8 дней назад

    Sir pc off how to again start video restart

    • @quick-tutorials
      @quick-tutorials  7 дней назад

      I'm not sure I understand the question, but if you mean your PC turned off while video encoding was in progress, you'll usually have to start over.

  • @jaywoelfel9228
    @jaywoelfel9228 Месяц назад

    I've been told, meaning recommended, to use Handbrake to convert video frame rates, but I've, so far been unable to have it do that properly? You seem to not recommend that at all. I have a video that started at one frame rate but that changed in an editing program and I was told handbrake could turn that back into the original/correct frame rate. The one time I tried it, for some reason Handbrake took the first frame of my "movie" and made a completely new video which was only that frame repeated for 90 minutes. What are your thoughts, other than you saying, don't do it in your posted video?

    • @quick-tutorials
      @quick-tutorials  Месяц назад +1

      Think of it this way - you can always reduce the frame rate, but you can’t increase it.
      For example, you can take a 60fps file and convert that to 30fps. The motion won’t look as fluid since you’re cutting your frame rate in half, but essentially the playback will still look okay.
      On the other hand if you take a 30fps file and try to convert that to 60fps, it cannot be done because Handbrake or any other video converter cannot create new frames for your video. Depending on the software it will either limit you to the frame rate of your current file, or it might allow you to convert it to a higher frame rate, but it will just duplicate frames to make it work. For example, converting a 30fps video to 60fps will make every other frame be a duplicate freeze frame. Technically the output file is 60fps, but the playback will look choppy because of the duplicate frames.

    • @jaywoelfel9228
      @jaywoelfel9228 Месяц назад

      @@quick-tutorials I'm basically taking a 30fps and reducing it to 20fps, the 30 actually had to duplicate some frames. So I'm trying to remove those to get back to the 20fps it was shot at. Yes I see what you're saying, you are what they used to call step printing in film, where you were repeating frames to make something slo motion, it can't see more of the event you "filmed" so it has a herky jerky feel which can be interesting and used to be the only want to have video slo motion, now you can film at higher frame rants on video.

    • @quick-tutorials
      @quick-tutorials  Месяц назад +1

      Ah I see what you’re trying to do. It’s always best to use the original file for conversions so using that 30fps file that has some duplicate frames will not give you ideal results, but I understand you might not always have access to the original.

    • @jaywoelfel9228
      @jaywoelfel9228 Месяц назад

      @@quick-tutorials Yes it's a silent film so shot at unconventional 20 fps then transferred wrongly to 29.97 so I think there are pull down frames.

  • @Mikilangelo-gy3nd
    @Mikilangelo-gy3nd 2 месяца назад

    Can I use this app for convert psp videos and if i can how?

    • @quick-tutorials
      @quick-tutorials  2 месяца назад

      Yes, this will work for converting videos for PSP. It should work when you choose MP4 format, H.264 encoder and set the dimensions/resolution to 480x272.
      There are also presets you can use, for example here: www.pspunk.com/psp-handbrake/

    • @Mikilangelo-gy3nd
      @Mikilangelo-gy3nd 2 месяца назад

      @@quick-tutorials thank you so much it works

  • @NevaranUniverse
    @NevaranUniverse 2 месяца назад +4

    Full guide but skips 80% of the settings.

    • @quick-tutorials
      @quick-tutorials  2 месяца назад

      Video compression in itself could easily be a 40-hour course. Was there something specific you wanted to learn more about?

    • @NevaranUniverse
      @NevaranUniverse 2 месяца назад +1

      @@quick-tutorials Going through all the settings with at least some sort of short explanation wouldve been nice. And not just about the video editing; the program itself also has a bunch of things that couldve been nice to be said, like needing to add all to queue media that you added, if its more than one - and how.

    • @illuzeweb
      @illuzeweb 2 месяца назад +2

      hence it says QUICK TUTORIALS

  • @antoniiocaluso1071
    @antoniiocaluso1071 2 месяца назад

    that BITRATE-part was still a little Vague.

    • @quick-tutorials
      @quick-tutorials  2 месяца назад

      Thanks for the feedback, I did go over that pretty quickly trying to keep the overall video length reasonable. Bitrate is basically the "amount of data" that's being used to display your video every second. High bitrate -> more data -> better video quality. Larger resolutions and high frame rates require higher bitrates to maintain decent image quality, and with smaller resolutions you can get away with lower bitrates while still maintaining good image quality. The contents of your video also matter - static imagery with simple colors doesn't require a very high bitrate to look good, while fast-moving shots with lots of fine detail will need a much higher bitrate, or they will look pixelated.
      An ideal bitrate depends on the material you're working with, and where the video will be displayed. RUclips for example recommends 8000kbps for regular 1080p video and between 35,000 to 45,000 kbps for 4K video.