Thank you, thank you, thank you for such an easy to understand video. Thank you for the recommended settings that you use. It eliminates a LOT of trial and error time. I really appreciate it.
To rip Blu-ray or DVD to MP4, you will need a Blu-ray ripping and converting tool. There are many programs out there that allow you to make copies of your Blu-rays and let you what them the way you want to view them. If you're seeking for the best video output quality, fastest video conversion speed and the most formats supported, DumboFab Blu-ray Ripper will be your best choice.
Thank you so much. awesome video!! i have a dvd that is DL and 7 chapters, each one is about 1gb so i cant pick the largest file like you mention, how do i handle this? thanks
If the video is broken up into multiple parts like a TV series with multiple episodes, you just select all the ones you think are the episodes, decrypt and then play it to make sure it's the ones you want. If it's a movie that they broke up into multiple parts, then you select all of them and then you will need to combine them afterward with a program like MKVtoolnix. mkvtoolnix.download/ or just keep them seperate as pt 1, pt 2, etc. MKVToolNix isn't the easiest to figure out how to use. But there are enough tuts on YT.
I have only seen that error a few times. 1) the MB isn't detecting the optical drive or there is an IO error. Generally a restart solves that issue. 2) the optical drive isn't actually a bluray or it's a bluray but a 4K disc was inserted and the firmware on the optical drive is 3.1 or higher. 3.0 firmware bluray drives will also work with 4K discs but 3.1 firmware bluray drive most of the time will not work with 4k discs. 3) the optical drive is malfunctioning. But that's rare. I have never had a bluray or DVD drive fail. 4) the disc was inserted upside down, which I am assuming that's not the case or the disc itself is blank. Which has happened to me 1 or two times in the past 10 years. Try a different disc.
I have ripped some DVD over to a USB THUMBDRIVE. It plays just fine on our laptops. When I try to play in my Pioneer unit, there isn't any sound. What is up?
I am assuming the default audio track is not compatible with yout pioneer unit or you are keeping them as MKV files and not converting them to MP4 files and the pioneer unit doesn't know which audio track to play. We have an older samsung smart TV. It was one of the first smart TVs samsung came out with. We have similar issues. I have to use Handbrake to reencode all the MKV files from the DVD/bluray to MP4 and manually select the 5.1 surround or stereo track, otherwise the TV will either not play the audio or will not do anything and report a format error. A lot of older TVs or audio receivers do not know how to play 7.1 or another newer form of audio track or they get confused when dealing with an MKV file that has multiple audio tracks. If you are using the MKV file, try converting it to MP4 using handbrake and manually select the 5.1 surround audio track and then see if that solves the issue. Other than that suggestion, I really have nothing.
My computer also will not play blu ray discs. It has something to do with Sony owning the patent on blu ray and not wanting to licence it to microsoft or something like that. There are some players you can download that will play blu rays. But in order to create a digital copy like I show, your computer does not need to be able to play blu ray discs. The process I sho converts it to an MP4 file which can be played by practically any computer.
@@doyouluvit You do have a Blu-ray optical drive? Because a DVD drive is different and incapable of reading a Blu-ray. On the slide out portion of the drive it will either have a DVD or Blu-ray logo.
It's been a while but I think I addressed this in the video. This is not legal advice: In my opinion, assuming you purchased a DVD, bluray or UHD movie on a disc and you are creating a copy for your own use while retaining the original, then it's just a backup. However, if someone intends to make a copy and sell it or give it away or make a copy then sell the original, then it ceases to be a backup and becomes illegal. I just don't think they are worried about people making backups of movies they purchased. From what I understand it's sort of a gray area that has not officially been adjudicated in court.
Thank you, thank you, thank you for such an easy to understand video. Thank you for the recommended settings that you use. It eliminates a LOT of trial and error time. I really appreciate it.
You are welcome.
Excellent Description on the video I learned so Much it would be complicated without your instructions EXCELLET JOB Thank You So Much
You are welcome.
Flawless details! Thank you!
Glad it was helpful.
Thank you soo muchh!! I was so confused in the beginning but I think I'm getting the hang of it👌👌👌
Cool beans. Yeah, once you do it a few times it gets way easier.
To rip Blu-ray or DVD to MP4, you will need a Blu-ray ripping and converting tool. There are many programs out there that allow you to make copies of your Blu-rays and let you what them the way you want to view them. If you're seeking for the best video output quality, fastest video conversion speed and the most formats supported, DumboFab Blu-ray Ripper will be your best choice.
DumboFab is just a rebranded DVDFab and neither one the last I checked, imported the chapters from the disk to the mp4 file.
Thank you so much. awesome video!! i have a dvd that is DL and 7 chapters, each one is about 1gb so i cant pick the largest file like you mention, how do i handle this? thanks
If the video is broken up into multiple parts like a TV series with multiple episodes, you just select all the ones you think are the episodes, decrypt and then play it to make sure it's the ones you want.
If it's a movie that they broke up into multiple parts, then you select all of them and then you will need to combine them afterward with a program like MKVtoolnix. mkvtoolnix.download/ or just keep them seperate as pt 1, pt 2, etc.
MKVToolNix isn't the easiest to figure out how to use. But there are enough tuts on YT.
thank you very much for the video
You are welcome.
I put the Movie in, and the response was no disk inserted. What is going on with my new Blu-ray DVD external player?
I have only seen that error a few times.
1) the MB isn't detecting the optical drive or there is an IO error. Generally a restart solves that issue.
2) the optical drive isn't actually a bluray or it's a bluray but a 4K disc was inserted and the firmware on the optical drive is 3.1 or higher. 3.0 firmware bluray drives will also work with 4K discs but 3.1 firmware bluray drive most of the time will not work with 4k discs.
3) the optical drive is malfunctioning. But that's rare. I have never had a bluray or DVD drive fail.
4) the disc was inserted upside down, which I am assuming that's not the case or the disc itself is blank. Which has happened to me 1 or two times in the past 10 years. Try a different disc.
I have ripped some DVD over to a USB THUMBDRIVE. It plays just fine on our laptops. When I try to play in my Pioneer unit, there isn't any sound. What is up?
I am assuming the default audio track is not compatible with yout pioneer unit or you are keeping them as MKV files and not converting them to MP4 files and the pioneer unit doesn't know which audio track to play.
We have an older samsung smart TV. It was one of the first smart TVs samsung came out with. We have similar issues. I have to use Handbrake to reencode all the MKV files from the DVD/bluray to MP4 and manually select the 5.1 surround or stereo track, otherwise the TV will either not play the audio or will not do anything and report a format error. A lot of older TVs or audio receivers do not know how to play 7.1 or another newer form of audio track or they get confused when dealing with an MKV file that has multiple audio tracks.
If you are using the MKV file, try converting it to MP4 using handbrake and manually select the 5.1 surround audio track and then see if that solves the issue. Other than that suggestion, I really have nothing.
Thank you
You are welcome. I like your screen name.
I put a blu ray disc into my computer and it does not work. Does your computer need to be able to play blu rays?? No one mentions that in any videos
My computer also will not play blu ray discs. It has something to do with Sony owning the patent on blu ray and not wanting to licence it to microsoft or something like that. There are some players you can download that will play blu rays. But in order to create a digital copy like I show, your computer does not need to be able to play blu ray discs. The process I sho converts it to an MP4 file which can be played by practically any computer.
@@BlenderRookie Thanks...for some reason I cannot do blu rays or dvd's. Must be something with my computer. Oh well
@@doyouluvit Are you using MakeMKV?
@@BlenderRookie Yes I tried, but since I can't get a dvd or bluray to work, I deleted it
@@doyouluvit You do have a Blu-ray optical drive? Because a DVD drive is different and incapable of reading a Blu-ray. On the slide out portion of the drive it will either have a DVD or Blu-ray logo.
is this legal?
It's been a while but I think I addressed this in the video.
This is not legal advice: In my opinion, assuming you purchased a DVD, bluray or UHD movie on a disc and you are creating a copy for your own use while retaining the original, then it's just a backup. However, if someone intends to make a copy and sell it or give it away or make a copy then sell the original, then it ceases to be a backup and becomes illegal. I just don't think they are worried about people making backups of movies they purchased.
From what I understand it's sort of a gray area that has not officially been adjudicated in court.
handbrake is far to slow
It can be. It tends not to run the CPU at 100%. Typically about 45-60%
Which program similar to handbrake do you recommend?
wonderfox@@BlenderRookie
@@MYMUSICCHANNEL-db4ky I'll check it out.